“Time is coming apart. Countless alternate and parallel realities are under attack, weakening and collapsing from relentless onslaught. If left unchecked, the universe faces an unstoppable descent toward entropy. Scarred and broken after decades spent tracking this escalating temporal disaster, while battling the nameless enemy responsible for it, an old friend seeks assistance from Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew of the Starship Enterprise. The apocalypse may originate from their future, but might the cause lie in their past? Identifying their adversary is but the first step toward defeating them, but early triumphs come with dreadful costs. What will the price be to achieve final victory, and how will that success be measured in futures as yet undefined?”
For a good number of years, perhaps as much as
fifteen years, I collected Star Trek novels, starting with 1979’s The Entropy
Effect. Most would be the novels from TOS and good chunk of TNG and DS9. By the
time VOY appeared, I begun to stop collecting (and to be honest, I did not read
most of the books I collected). Starting around 2001, when the last film
featuring The Next Generation cast was out, and the future of the franchise
looked dim (Enterprise would run on a few years more, but since it was set
before TOS, the books really did not impact much of Trek’s ever so complicated
continuity. Anyways, with Star Trek: Nemesis done and no new films or TV series
to be set after that film, Pocket books began an ambitious plan to expand the
franchise. Given the freedom and latitude not being tied to “official canon”,
the various Star Trek novels from the all the TV series (and various spin-offs
featuring other Starfleet crews) could take the franchise into uncharted territories.
This would stay in place until 2018, when plans were being developed to launch
Star Trek: Picard, the first post-Nemesis series to air on CBS All Access
streaming channel (what is now known as Paramount+). While Star Trek: Discovery
was already on, much like Enterprise, it was a series set before TOS (though
plans were afoot to move this series into the far future), so its impact on
Picard would not be affected by the new TV series launch.
But with Picard’s launch, which would rewrite everything that came before, basically meant putting twenty years of Star Trek novels from all the spin-offs out to pasture. But instead of doing what Disney did when they acquired the Star Wars franchise, which was basically toss thirty years of novels out and start from scratch with a new timeline, Pocket Books decided to properly end those two decades of novels with what eventually became Coda. This trilogy of novels by Dayton Ward, James Swallow, and David Mack sets out to end this timeline by giving long-time readers a satisfying ending to two decades of careful continuity, adventures featuring the cast of TNG, DS9, and VOY. Also contributing would be the cast from Star Trek: Titan, New Frontier, Corps of Engineering, Klingon Empire, and Department of Temporal Investigations. All three writers selected to finish out this era needed to create a galaxy ending crisis that would bring everyone together and bring it to a close. The question is can it work? Can these novels appeal to dedicated long-time readers plus those (like me) who only have read a handful of the hundreds of novels that have come out in the last twenty years?
For the most part, I liked the
book. Ward gives us a four page “Previously” before the book begins, which
highlights various events that have transpired over two decades in those novels
(I think it’s around 17 books, but I maybe wrong). This will (and did) help me,
but I also realize there was not enough space to mention everything, so I’m
sure I missed some small nods. I was surprised how much the book recapped a lot
of events from the various TV shows as it went along –my feelings is that while
not everyone read those novels, most know about TNG, DS9, and VOY from the TV
episodes. I’m not sure if this laundry list of reminders was for the non-fans
or Easter eggs for those hardcore readers, but I did find myself skipping over
them.
Time travel once again becomes
the well Star Trek keeps going back to, with Wesley Crusher now a Traveler (and
Time Lord?) who sets this three-part finale in action. His ascendance and his
power have grown greatly and he now senses the doom of the universe, but to
find out who’s behind it, he’ll need to nearly sacrifice himself to do it (and
does, but another version, a younger version eventually shows up on the
Enterprise). The book plays out like you expect, with a lot of side characters
and security people dying in replace of our heroes (who always miraculously
escape at the last second), a ton of techno-babble and STEM crew members who
can instantly understand all of it and give it back with machine like precision
(no one has a halting speech patterns anymore. I know this has to be in books, but it is annoying).
Moments Asunder is highly accessible, but truth be told, readers would probably enjoy it more if they read all those background novels. So it’s not a particularly dense tale, and it wraps up (if I can use that word for the beginning of trilogy) it’s part of the story like every episode of Star Trek has done for decades – a huge rush of action, adventure, emotional triumphs and loss- and get a neat little coda, I guess, before a quiet To Be Continued…on the final page.
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