Sunday, April 25, 2021

KIRK DECIDES TO TRESPASS AND HIS LANDING PARTY ENDS UP IN A WESTERN


 Episode Title:  Spectre of the Gun  

Air Date: 10/25/1968

Written by Gene L. Coon

Directed by Vincent McEveety

Cast: William Shatner as Captain James T. Kirk    Leonard Nimoy as Commander Spock             DeForest Kelley as Dr. Leonard H. McCoy AKA “Bones”              James Doohan  as Lieutenant Commander Montgomery Scott AKA “Scotty”        Nichelle Nichols as Lieutenant Nyota Uhura          Eddie Paskey as Lieutenant Leslie                 Bill Blackburn as Lieutenant Hadley    Roger Holloway as Lieutenant Lemli       Walter Koenig as Ensign Pavel Chekov                 Jeannie Malone as unmanned Yeoman              Ron Soble as Wyatt Earp               Don Keefer as Bonnie Beecher        Charles Maxwell as Virgil Earp               Rex Holman as Morgan Earp            Sam Gilman as Doc Holliday            Charles Seel as Ed            Bill Zuckert as Johnny Behan              Ed McCready as Barber            Abraham Sofaer as Melkotian (voice)       Richard Anthony as Rider   Paul Baxley as 1st Cowboy     Bob Orrison as 2nd Cowboy                        Gregg Palmer as Rancher

Ships and Space Stations: USS Enterprise NCC-1701

Planets:  Melkos

My Spoiler filled summary and review: The Enterprise is on a mission to the planet Melkos under orders to make contact and establish diplomatic relations.   Since the Melkotians are known to be xenophobic this is going to prove to be quite the task.   As the ship gets closer a buoy shows up on an intercept course.  If the Enterprise alters its path the buoy follows.   The whole thing starts to be a reminder of The Corbomite Maneuver, until the buoy speaks.  Everyone on the bridge hears it in their own language.  Kirk hears English, Spock Vulcan, Ensign Chekov Russian, and Lt. Uhura hears it in Swahili.  The message is the same: stay away. 

Buoy wants them gone!

Now you would think an organization like the Federation would respect their wishes, but this is a crew that goes boldly.  So Kirk, citing his orders to establish peaceful relations says he intends to do just that whether the Melkotians want him to or not.  Kirk orders the Enterprise into orbit around the planet and forms a landing party of five (himself, Spock, McCoy, Scotty, and Chekov) to beam down.  When they do they are surprised to discover fog as the sensors did not indicate they would have any.  The landing party also discovers that none of their equipment works.  A Melkotian revels themselves and Kirk tells them they are peaceful while pointing a phaser in their direction.

Melkotian who Kirk points a phaser at!

All of the sudden the world transforms around them and they are now in Tombstone, Arizona on October 26, 1881.  This was the day the famous Gun Fight at the O.K. Corral occurred.  However there is something terribly off.  It almost as if the Melkotians are short on their studio budget, for all the buildings only have a front wall with nothing on the sides or back.  All the townspeople are oblivious to the fact that their homes and businesses would be in a lot of trouble if it rained.  They also see the Enterprise landing party as the Clanton gang.  In particular Kirk is Ike Clanton, Scott is Billy Clanton, McCoy is Tom McLaury, Spock is Frank McLaury, and Chekov is Billy Claiborne.   Their phasers have been exchanged for six-shooter revolvers.  Spock concludes that the Melkotians have taken this from Captain Kirk’s mind because they hold him responsible for the intrusion. 

Okay we get to be in a Western

Not wanting to get in violent confrontation Kirk tries to reason with the Earps. He finds Wyatt Earp not in the mood to negotiate.  The only one of them who seems to be having a good time is Chekov whose character has the affections of a pretty girl named Bonnie.  Kirk gets desperate and tries to tell the towns people the truth and no one believes him thinking that he is joking.  With the truth failing Kirk and crew decide to get out of town, which ironically is what they should have done at the start of this episode.  However a force field prevents them from leaving. 

Since it appears the Melkotians are going to force them to relive the historic event as it happened Kirk doesn’t trust their six-shooters to work as a successful defense.  They decide to build a tranquilizer weapon that will knock out, not kill, their opponents.  McCoy ironically gets his supplies from Doc Holiday who is scheduled to shoot at him today.  While this is going on Morgan Earp comes to challenge Chekov over his girl.  Instead of a knife, Chekov makes a worse error and brings a charge to a gun fight and is promptly killed.


The remaining crew is devastated but there is one clear silver lining: Chekov’s character Billy Claiborne survived the gunfight at the O.K. Corral.  For the first time since they got here they were able to change something.  Kirk orders a test on the new tranquilizer weapon and Scotty volunteers.  Then in the funniest scene in the whole episode the weapon fails.  Kirk and crew decided to stay right where they are and not even go to the O.K. Corral.   However moments later they are transported straight there.

Normally they are the good guys!

Well it seems they are all doomed.  However Spock has an observation, the reason the tranquilizer failed is because it wasn’t real.  If that is not real neither are their weapons.  The other three point out that Chekov was killed, and then Spock said he wasn’t certain that he was but if so it was because his mind tricked him into thinking he was dead.  Spock knows their bullets are not real and therefore he cannot be harmed by them.  McCoy points out that as human beings they can’t be so certain, that is when Kirk suggests a mind meld to make them so.  Spock performs it and when Earps and Holiday show up their bullets pass right though the Starfleet officers harmlessly. 

That is when Kirk remembers that he is the greatest fighter in the known galaxy and decides to take down Wyatt Earp with moves based on such speed and grace that Earp is helpless in the attack.  Kirk is almost going to kill him but when he sees the fear in Earp’s eyes and remembers how his fight with the Gorn ended he relents.  This proves to the Melkotians that the Federation’s intentions are peaceful and with that the illusion ends and they are all now back on the Enterprise’s bridge with a living Chekov.   It had all been an illusion they had never left, and they conclude Chekov was alive because he was focused on the girl.  The Melkotians are satisfied and they invite the Federation in for continued contact making the Enterprise’s mission a success.   


Additional thoughts: This actually reminds me of an episode of The Real Ghostbusters that I watched as a kid.  In that episode the Ghostbusters also had to play he part of the Clantons, when the ghosts of the Earps and Doc Holiday came back to clean up the town again. 

Given that Starfleet has the Prime Directive it seems odd that they want their starship captains to establish contact with unknown aliens with instructions that by “contact” they mean exactly the type of relationship that the Federation deems as desirable regardless of what these new peoples want.  That seems almost imperialistic to me.   If Kirk’s orders were to make contact with the Melkotians the moment they encountered the buoy and its message was: “We are the Melkotians, now go away,” one would think Kirk would be like “Well, we made contact and they told us to pound sand, mission accomplished.”   Not the result they wanted but I fail to see why they shouldn’t accept it.

Kirk seems a little jealous of someone's luck!

So the Melkotians are powerful enough to reach inside your head to create powerful illusions yet they can’t finish the job with the same illusions.  Buildings missing three walls and only a skeleton population in the town, you would think if they were pulling this all out of Kirk’s head that they would be able to finish the job.  It turns out that the show really did run out of money in the budget so they had to be creative and that is what they came up with.  Good way of improvising on the part of Vincent McEveety.  

Yes, something is missing

Another thing that bothered me about the episode was Kirk’s extremely stupid behavior that I find really out of character.  Not only does he, under orders, try to impose himself on the Melkotians when he first sees one he points his phaser directly at them to demonstrate his peaceful intentions. During the illusion he suggests to Spock they should try to build a communicator to contact the ship where he should clearly see that whatever mechanism the Melkotians were using to cause their original communicators to malfunction will most likely also stop a coupled together one.  Worst was when he tried to reason with the townspeople that he and his friends were from “the future” and they weren’t the Clanton gang.  Kirk should have realized by the three walls missing on all the buildings that this was some sort of alien creation not an act of time travel.  He has time traveled to the 1960s not once but twice, and he went back to the 1920s via the Guardian of Forever.  He knows what time travel is like and this isn’t it.  These aren’t real people and there is no way they could be reached by having them feel the fabric of his shirt.  Kirk should be better than all of this.  I would expect more from Gene L. Coon. 

Then there is Spock, who not only seems to be completely on board with this whole trespass thing, is in this episode often “right” but for the “wrong” reasons.  The one character who is defined by logic and reason and yet his logic in this episode is as flawed as the buildings with missing walls.  The biggest moments of this are in the episode’s climax.  He concludes the bullets can’t hurt them because they are not real based on the fact that the tranquilizer failed where it otherwise should have worked.  Except that at this point we have already scene Chekov killed by the bullets.  The reason we are then given is that because Chekov believed the bullets were real that is why they could kill him, but Scotty had every reason to believe the tranquilizer was real and yet that failed.  Spock did add the Chekov might not be dead, I wish they stuck with that reasoning instead of ‘he’s dead because he believed.”  At least the ending would have made a little more sense.

Chekov's focus!

Chekov is clearly a lover not a fighter.  I mean when someone has a gun on you and you are armed that weapon is your best chance of survival not a charge.  Yet that is what we saw from our dear Ensign.  Now granted if you wanted to catch Morgan Earp in state of surprise then maybe there is some logic in a charge, I imagine he was quite surprised.  However his gun solved his problem as Indiana Jones’s would over a decade later.

I really did love the failed tranquilizer scene.  That was hilarious.  My favorite part is when it was clearly not working Scotty tires to help by sticking his face directly in the fumes!  At that point it was clearly a failure even if Scotty did pass out.  It’s not as if the Earps and Holiday are going to stick their faces in it.

FINAL  GRADE 3 of 5

Sunday, April 18, 2021

(Re-)CANONIZE THE BOOKS (MOST OF THEM)


PART I: WHAT THE BOOKS DO FOR ME AS A FAN

For almost as long as I have been a Star Trek fan I have been a Star Trek book reader.  I started watching Star Trek in the 4th grade and it was about two years later that I bought my first Star Trek book. My time collecting them ran from about 1993 to 2005.  I haven’t collected any that have come out in the last fifteen years or so.  After the series went off TV there was nothing to directly connect them with my active fandom and at that time I also started to develop a strong interest in reading actual history books.  However my time collecting them represents an important time my life.  My best friend, Toby, and I had a rivalry over who could collect the most.  I can’t remember who actually won. 

The books were another way I could delve into Star Trek.  In the 1990s there was a lot of Star Trek.  The Next Generation was showing off its re-runs “five nights a week,” Deep Space Nine and Voyager were running simultaneously, a new movie seemed to come out once every two years, and I was collecting the Original Series through a deal with Columbia House.   Yet I couldn’t get enough of it I needed something else to satisfy the craving.  To be fair we didn’t have the on-demand options that we have today where I can literally watch any Star Trek episode in the entire franchise whenever I please.  

The first book I ever bought was “The Disinherited.” This book was #59 on the original series book list and it had some of my favorite authors in Peter David, Michael Jan Friedman, and Robert Greenberger.  In the book the Enterprise has to face off against an unknown alien fleet.  The story takes place between seasons 1 and 2 of the Original Series and it tells the tale of Ensign Chekov’s first days as a bridge officer.  In addition to that the book also gives Lt. Uhura a larger role than she ever had in the classic series.  She is temporally assigned to the USS Lexington by Starfleet to help with some difficult translations.  So the audience gets to see her interact with Commodore Bob Wesley from The Ultimate Computer.   

My first Star Trek book 

As I skim through the book that I last read when I was in Middle School, because I am trying to remember why it was Uhura went to the USS Lexington to begin with, I am once again awestruck by some incredibly well written scenes involving the cast.  There is an opening scene where young Ensign Chekov is running to the bridge because he is behind his time.  He runs into Lt. Uhura who gives him a gentle chastisement.  While reading it I actually “hear” the voices of Walter Koenig and Nichelle Nicholas reciting the dialogue.  There is another great scene in this book that I can recall from childhood without going in and re-reading it.  In that scene a conversation between Dr. McCoy and Lt. Sulu about Chekov gets overheard resulting in some great embarrassment for Dr. McCoy.  If I had forgotten how much I love the books these scenes would have quickly reminded me.

The books as far as I can tell give three basic services for fans:

Star Trek Adventures Outside the Limits of Live-Action

A traditional Star Trek episode is an hour long plus commercials.  After the commercials you are left with about forty-five minutes.  This means the story has to be structured and based accordingly with the focus being on one or two of the main characters plus the antagonist for the week.  The authors of the books however don’t have to structure their story around such narrow time frame.   Although some books do often focus on one primary character they have the ability to do justice to all the characters that they are working with.  They are also unrestrained by budgets and technological limitations on graphics that existed in the time any particular episode was produced.

The book I had previously mentioned “The Disinherited” does all those things.  You have a story featuring two Starfleet starships and an alien fleet.  Yet the book allows you to explore the characters of Uhura and Chekov a little more, while at the same time doing justice to the rest of the characters.  

The books also allow for new stories to be told featuring crews from the past without having to worry about re-casting.   I especially appreciated this in the 1990s, the TNG, DS9, and Voyager books were good, but at the time two of those shows were ongoing still and TNG kept producing movies.  Books featuring classical Star Trek with Kirk, Spock, and the old crew were still possible despite the ages and later deaths of members of the cast.  I remember picking up the book “Mudd in Your Eye.”  That came out my freshmen year of High School.  A great book that feature the crew going up against Harry Mudd, after their encounters with him in Mudd’s Women and I, Mudd but before the TAS episode “Mudd’s Passion.”  Nowadays modern readers will feel that way about the first five Star Trek crews. 

An adventure of the classic crew with Harry Mudd written in the 1990s!

Filling in the Gaps

Although I usually presume a week’s time frame between episodes in the same season there is no guarantee of that.  Sometimes an episode will begin by acknowledging that they have been at a particular task for weeks or months.  A good example would be Shore Leave where Kirk notes that the crew had just finished up a mission where they had been working for three months straight.   

There are however larger gaps.  The first pilot, The Cage, took place over ten years before the rest of the series.  (A gap of time that the new series Strange New Worlds would like to fill.)  The second pilot, Where No Man Has Gone Before, has such a different tone in terms of relationships of the characters that it has been speculated that it takes place a full year before its closet episode, The Corbomite Maneuver.  Then there is the fact that for a five year mission we only got three seasons, maybe four if you count The Animated Series.

Star Trek: The Motion Picture takes place about two years after the first five year mission ended.  A great book series that tries to fill that amount of time is “The Lost Years.”  After the movie is over the crew that was reassembled in order to save the galaxy are sitting on the bridge of a USS Enterprise, which had just completed an 18-month refit.  It looks like they are ready to go own new five-year mission, and it seems like that is what they are attending to do.  However when The Wrath of Kahn comes out in 1982, ten years have gone by in their fictional universe and the Enterprise is now the Academy training ship and almost all of her former command crew now serve as instructors.  What about the second five year mission?  There are a number of books that cover this time period.   “Firestrom” by L.A. Graf is a good example.

A book, despite the uniforms on the cover, take place after The Motion Picture. 

There is also a time gap between The Final Frontier and The Undiscovered Country.  At the end of The Voyage Home the crew as their “punishment” gets sent to the new USS Enterprise NCC-1701-A.  In The Final Frontier Scotty and Uhura are getting the new ship ready for their first mission when Sybok’s action forces them out early.  Then when The Undiscovered Country they’re all quite a bit older and are heading to retirement instead of a new mission.  So what happened to the five year mission with the Enterprise-A?  For answers we get books like “Probe” by Margret Wander Bonanno.

A great story taking place in between Star Trek V and VI

               Of course that biggest gap of all is the time period between The Undiscovered Country and the beginning on Star Trek: The Next Generation that is over eighty years.  In this time we have two more starships named Enterprise, Sulu’s continued captaincy of the Excelsior, and of course Picard’s adventures on the Stargazer.    The books provide a number of fill-ins for this era.  One of my favorites is “Captain’s Daughter” by Peter David that deals with both Captain Sulu on the Excelsior, and his daughter serving under Captain Harriman on the Enterprise-B. 
A great story from the lost era!

New Meanings on Old Episodes

The final thing that I think the books do extremely well is the give new or better meaning to older and, in some cases, not as good episodes.  A good example is the episode Elaan of Troyius.  I never really cared for this episode, I didn’t hate, just didn’t care.  However after reading L.A. Graf’s book “Firestorm” that revisits the Elasian culture I came to appreciate this episode more.  In my reviews I did not rank Assignment Earth very high.  When I read the book "Assignment Eternity” by Greg Cox I started to enjoy the episode more.  Even though I always loved the episode The Squire of Gothos, I began to enjoy it much more after reading Peter David’s book “Q-Squared.”  

A good way to make a so-so episode good.
  

THE QUESTION OF CANON

In the last ten or fifteen years it has become common to refer to the books as “beta canon” or more dismissively “non-canon.”  If I have to choose I would choose the first one because the second is just insulting.  You see this commonly on any threads in social media about Star Trek.  Ex. Person A: Is Trelane a Q?  Person B: Well he was established as so in Q-Squared.  Person A: Books aren’t canon. 

Referring to them as Beta or secondary makes more sense to me and it is in line with how they were almost always viewed.  When reading an interview with one of the producers—I forget who it was—for the old magazine Star Trek Communicator, he responded to a question about the books status by explaining that all the books were official but their canonical status was subservient to the live-action shows.  In other words you could take what the books said as events that actually happened but if the show later conflicted with it the show’s version prevailed.  There is actually quite a bit of evidence that the show’s producers and handlers of the franchise put a lot of thought into what elements of the franchise were allowed into the books.     

I also have some inside information on this.   Back in 1999 I brought a book about my all-time second favorite character of the franchise and high school crush Seven of Nine.  The book was written by Christie Golden and was titled simply “Seven of Nine.” I enjoyed it however not only because it featured my favorite former Borg, but how it presented the Borg in general.  In the last few seasons of Voyager I started to become disgruntled with the direction of the series.  It had gotten so bad that it seemed the only reason I was even watching the show anymore was because my continued infatuation with Seven.   One of the main reasons I was upset was how the writers had seemed to turn the Borg from the menacing almost unstoppable force into some pathetic villains of the week. 

A book featuring an all time favorite. 

I think the Voyager writers were jealous of Deep Space Nine’s Gul Dukat and that character’s relationship with Captain Sisko that they wanted a villain like that for Janeway.  Thus they took the Borg Queen—already a controversial concept for me—and tried to make her Janeway’s archnemesis. The Borg Queen turned into a mustache twirling bad guy who would occasionally flirt with Janeway over the view screen.   This book however showed how the Borg were meant to presented.  Funny thing was the Borg are only in the story in flashbacks.  The main villain that the crew of Voyager had to face was some evil Emperor named Beytek who rules the Lhiaarian Empire.

So after reading this book and really loving it I decided to email Ms. Golden.  In the email I told her how much I loved her book, especially how much I enjoyed her writing on the Borg.  I explained to her how I thought that everything that she was doing was completely superior to what they were doing on the show particularly my annoyance with the Borg Queen concept.   

To my surprise she wrote back.  I wish I had a copy of this email it was on my old college email address, which I stopped using fifteen years ago.  However having read it almost a millions times I can still sum it up.  She started by thanking for buying and reading her book.  She appreciated the compliments, and that she agreed the Borg should be written as scary.  Ms. Golden did defend the TV writers a bit with the Borg Queen/Insect Queen analogy.  Then she laid down a bombshell.  Writers for the Star Trek franchise books had to get them cleared with the company.  That part was no surprise it is what she wrote next that was.  She told me that direct stories that featured the Borg were off limits to the writers.  The decision makers at Paramount did not want there to be conflicting Borg narratives out there.   Now if it were a given that the books held no canon status then why would they care about that.

A more common example of canon status is the company’s desire to add Historian’s Notes to various books.  These historian notes allowed the reader to know exactly when the book they were about to read took place and fit in with the rest of the franchise.  If the books were not even intended as canon then that is an odd thing to do.  

A traditional Historians note from the previously mentioned Probe

In addition the traditional Historian's Notes in the book “Federation” by Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens since it covers what had then been the two parts of the Franchise: ToS and TNG, it had a ‘historian’s timeline.’  In addition they also had a disclaimer in the Acknowledgments section.  

“Though we have drawn on established STAR TREK lore for many of the events in this book, we must add that much of the early history of the Federation, and Cochrane’s adventures prior to and after inventing the warp drive, are extrapolations solely of our own creation and thus could be superseded by official adventures in the years to come.  Until then, we hope the audience will enjoy reading this one possible STAR TREK adventure as much as we enjoyed writing it.”  

Again this is a rather odd thing to have to put if the books aren’t part of the official lore anyway.

Was careful to acknowledge that some things might later conflict. 

                 However there is an even more interesting case.  One of the very best Star Trek books I ever read was Peter David’s “Vendetta.”  It involved two deadly threats.  One of these was the Borg coming back for a rematch after The Best of Both Worlds.  It also saw a more advanced model of the Doomsday Machine arrive.  The novel sets off a three-way conflict between the Enterprise, the Borg, and the new Doomsday device.  However the powers at be were a little upset about certain elements about the book, but it was too late as they had already advertised for it.  So they decided to include this disclaimer warning how this book might conflict with what Gene Roddenberry wanted and therefore were to be taken down just as the author’s interpretation and not part of the actual Star Trek universe.   
A story some producers had issues!

If the Star Trek books were never to be interpreted as canon then would such a disclaimer have ever been necessary?  I would say no and yet here we are.  

Vendetta's disclaimer!

HOW TO SOLVE CONTINUNITY ISSUES

One of the legitimate issues with canonizing most of the books is there would be some continuity conflicts with the show.  As a result they can’t all be canon.  I do acknowledge this is true with some books but I think most can be saved. In my first post I made on this blog, I discussed my view with some of the conflicting continuity of the various shows and how it can be interpreted.   To summarize when you take into account all the various time travel instances that occur in the series there are numerous possibilities for butterfly effects to emerge. 

A good example of such butterfly effects is with Star Trek: Enterprise, despite the fact that every time later Star Trek series referred to the NCC-1701 it was always called the “original Enterprise” this show featured an Enterprise a hundred years before it.   Not to mention that Archer’s ship never made it on the wall of the Enterprise-D in Star Trek: The Next Generation.  When you factor in the time travel adventure of Star Trek: First Contact these errors start to make some sense.  Cochrane having been saved by the crew of the Enterprise decides to call his first ship that. In the unaltered timeline Johnathan Archer and his crew probably still existed but their ship may have called the Horizon, Phoenix II, or some other thing.  Also the Temporal Cold War that we get introduced to could also be used to explain a lot of inconsistencies from that series as it relates to others.  Such as why Picard’s tale of the first Federation/Klingon encounter in the episode First Contact is not what we get in the opening episode Broken Bow. 

Now let’s take a look at the book “Sarek” by A.C. Crispin.  It is billed on the cover as “The incredible story behind one of Star Trek’s best loved characters.”  This book was published in 1994 so for a modern reader this may have to appear as non-canon as nowhere in the book is there a Michael Burnham.  However in Discovery we learn of the time traveling “red angels” and that one of these (since this is a recent series I am trying to keep spoilers to a minimum) made it so that Burnham would come into the custody of Spock’s parents and join his family.  In this light we can view Crispin’s novel as Serek’s life pre-red angel temporal intervention.  The same can then be said for the previously mentioned “Federation.” Reeves-Stevens’s timeline is the one that was later altered by the Temporal Wars. 

Some modern continuity issues that can easily be worked out. 

GREAT STAR TREK BOOKS THAT NEED TO BE CANON

Spock’s World by Daine Duane


This is a book that spent eight weeks on the New York Times Best Seller List in 1988.

The Lost Years series by J.M. Dullard and other authors.


These books are a great bridge between the end of the series and the start of the movies.

The New Frontier Series by Peter David


This features a Star Trek crew that is entirely from the book series and not the live action shows. 

Q-Squared by Peter David


Heck let’s just say anything by Peter David by this point.

Invasion series by various authors


A great four-way crossover back when there were only four Star Trek series  

The Ashes of Eden by William Shatner and the for mentioned Judith and Garfield Reeves-Sevens


I don’t know if the entire Shaterverse can be made canon but this book explains what Kirk was doing before his fated trip on the Enterprise –B and the final fate of the Enterprise-A!

All of the books that I mention earlier in this post should also be included.

In closing I would just repeat that I think the Star Trek universe is a lot richer with the books in them.

Star Trek book series

          Mission to Horatius                           Mark Reynolds                   September 1968


           Spock Must Die!                               James Blish                         February 1970


           Starfleet Technical Manual                  Franz Joseph                      November 1975


           Star Trek: The New Voyages                                   various                                March 1976

            story 1 story 2  story 3 story 4 story 5 story 6 story 7 story 8 story 9


           Spock, Messiah!                       Theodore Cogswell and Charles Spano      September1976


           The Price of the Phoenix          Sondra Marshak and Myrna Culbreath          July 1977


           Planet of Judgment                      Joe Haldeman                           August 1977 


          Star Trek: The New Voyages 2             various                             January 1978 

          story 1 story 2 story 3 story 4 story 5 story 6 story 7 story 8 story 9 story 10 


               Vulcan!                                                   Kathleen Sky                      September 1978


          The Starless World                                      Gordon Eklund                     November 1978


          Trek to Madworld                                       Stephen Goldin                     January 1979  

    

          World Without End                                      Joe Haldeman                      February 1979   


      The Fate of the Phoenix            Sondra Marshak and Myrna Culbreath     May 1979         

        

          Devil World                              Gordon Eklund                     November 1979      


   
1              Star Trek: The Motion Picture (novelization)   Gene Roddenberry    December 1979

2              The Entropy Effect          Vonda N. McIntyre         June 1981     

       

3              The Klingon Gambit        Robert E. Vardeman       October 1981    


4              The Covenant of the Crown        HowardWeinstein          December 1981       

        

5      The Prometheus Design          Sondra Marshak and Myrna Culbreath             March 1982 

        

6              The Abode of Life            Lee Correy          May 1982   

          

7              The Wrath of Khan  (novelization)            Vonda N. McIntyre         July 1982             

8              Black Fire             Sonni Cooper     January 1983     

9              Triangle                Sondra Marshak and Myrna Culbreath               March 1983        

10           Web of the Romulans    M. S. Murdock  June 1983           

11           Yesterday's Son                A. C. Crispin        August 1983      

12           Mutiny on the Enterprise             Robert E. Vardeman       October 1983    

13           The Wounded Sky           Diane Duane      December 1983  

               Voyage to Adventure     Michael J. Dodge    January 1984

14           The Trellisane Confrontation      David Dvorkin    February 1984  

15           Corona                  Greg Bear           April 1984           

16           The Final Reflection    John M. Ford          May 1984            

17           The Search for Spock (novelization)         Vonda N. McIntyre         June 1984           

18           My Enemy, My Ally   Diane Duane            July 1984             

19           The Tears of the Singers               Melinda Snodgrass          September 1984              

20           The Vulcan Academy Murders   Jean Lorrah         November 1984               

21           Uhura's Song     Janet Kagan        January 1985     

22           Shadow Lord      Laurence Yep     March 1985        

23           Ishmael                Barbara Hambly                  May 1985          

24           Killing Time         Della van Hise    July 1985             

25           Dwellers in the Crucible                    Margaret Wander Bonanno    September 1985              

26           Pawns and Symbols        Majliss Larson    November 1985               

27           Mindshadow     J. M. Dillard         January 1986     

28           Crisis on Centaurus         Brad Ferguson   March 1986        

29           Dreadnought!            Diane Carey               May 1986            

30           Demons               J. M. Dillard         July 1986

               Enterprise: The First Adventure                  Vonda N. McIntyre         September 1986

31           Battlestations!                  Diane Carey        November 1986 

               Phaser Fight                      Barbara & Scott Siegel              December 1986   

               The Voyage Home (novelization)        Vonda N. McIntyre        December 1986 

32           Chain of Attack   Gene DeWeese                 February 1987               

33           Deep Domain    Howard Weinstein          April 1987           

34           Dreams of the Raven     Carmen Carter  June 1987

                Strangers from the Sky  Margaret Wander Bonanno        July 1987

35           The Romulan Way       Diane Duane and Peter Morwood                August 1987      

36           How Much for Just the Planet?                  John M. Ford            October 1987  

               Mr. Scott’s Guide to the Enterprise    Lora Johnson              November 1987

37           Bloodthirst          J. M. Dillard         December 1987               

               Final Frontier        Diane Carey        January 1988

38           The IDIC Epidemic            Jean Lorrah         February 1988  

39           Time for Yesterday         A. C. Crispin         April 1988           

40           Timetrap              David Dvorkin    June 1988           

41           The Three-Minute Universe       Barbara Paul       August 1988

               Spock's World                     Diane Duane      September 1988              

42           Memory Prime                 Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens        October 1988    

43           The Final Nexus                          Gene DeWeese      December 1988               

44           Vulcan's Glory   D. C. Fontana     February 1989  

45           Double, Double                         Michael Jan Friedman           April 1989   

                The Final Frontier  (novelization)   J. M. Dillard                           June 1989

46           The Cry of the Onlies      Judy Klass            October 1989

               The Lost Years                JM Dilard             October 1989        

47           The Kobayashi Maru       Julia Ecklar           December 1989               

48           Rules of Engagement     Peter Morwood               February 1990  

49           The Pandora Principle    Carolyn Clowes      April 1990      

50           Doctor's Orders                             Diane Duane         June 1990

              Prime Directive                   Judith and Garfield Reeves Stevens        September 1990

51           Enemy Unseen        V. E. Mitchell               October 1990    

52           Home Is the Hunter        Dana Kramer-Rolls           December 1990               

53           Ghost-Walker                 Barbara Hambly             February 1991        

54           A Flag Full of Stars            Brad Ferguson             April 1991 

55           Renegade           Gene DeWeese                                        June 1991   

56           Legacy          Michael Jan Friedman            August 1991      

57           The Rift                           Peter David             November 1991  

                The Undiscovered Country  (novelization)      J. M. Dillard          January 1992

58           Faces of Fire       Michael Jan Friedman                March 1992

                Probe                    Margaret Wander Bonanno        April 1992

59           The Disinherited               Peter David, Michael Jan Friedman, and Robert Greenberger                        May 1992         

60           Ice Trap                L. A. Graf             July 1992             

61           Sanctuary            John Vornholt   September 1992              

62           Death Count      L. A. Graf             November 1992

                Best Destiny       Diane Carey        November 1992

63           Shell Game         Melissa Crandall               February 1993  

64           The Starship Trap             Mel Gilden          April 1993           

65           Windows on a Lost World             V. E. Mitchell             June 1993    

66           From the Depths              Victor Milan        August 1993      

              Shadows on the Sun         Michael Jan Friedman    August 1993

67           The Great Starship Race                        Diane Carey                October 1993    

68           Firestorm            L. A. Graf             January 1994     

               Sarek     A. C. Crispin        March 1994

69           The Patrian Transgression            Simon Hawke    April 1994           

70           Traitor Winds     L. A. Graf             June 1994           

71           Crossroad            Barbara Hambly                     September 1994         

72           The Better Man                                Howard Weinstein          December 1994

73           Recovery                      J. M. Dillard                March 1995        

74           The Fearful Summons    Denny Martin Flinn         June 1995           

75           First Frontier      Diane Carey and James Kirkland                                 August 1995     

76           The Captain's Daughter                Peter David             December 1995           

77           Twilight's End                                   Jerry Oltion           January 1996     

78           The Rings of Tautee        Dean Wesley Smith and Kristine Kathryn Rusch  May 1996            

79           First Strike           Diane Carey        July 1996

                Crisis on Vulcan                 Brad Strickland and Barbara Strickland    August 1996

80           The Joy Machine              Theodore Sturgeon and James Gunn      September 1996

               Aftershock                            John Vornholt                                             September 1996

              Cadet Kirk                                    Diane Carey                             October 1996

81           Mudd in Your Eye                 Jerry Oltion                                              January 1997           

82           Mind Meld                             John Vornholt                                June 1997

                Vulcan's Forge                   Josepha Sherman and Susan Shwartz     August 1997

               Treaty's Law        Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith     October 1997

83           Heart of the Sun               Pamela Sargent and George Zebrowski November 1997               

84           Assignment: Eternity      Greg Cox             January 1998

                War Dragons                      L. A. Graf             June 1998

               Where Sea Meets Sky    Jerry Oltion         October 1998

85           Republic          Michael Jan Friedman         December 1998               

86           Constitution   Michael Jan Friedman        December 1998

87           Enterprise        Michael Jan Friedman       January 1999     

              Vulcan's Heart    Josepha Sherman and Susan Shwartz     July 1999

88           Across the Universe       Pamela Sargent and George Zebrowski October 1999    

89           Wagon Train to the Stars         Diane Carey             June 2000           

90           Belle Terre            Dean Wesley Smith and Diane Carey     June 2000

91           Rough Trails                    L. A. Graf July 2000             

92           The Flaming Arrow         Kathy Oltion and Jerry Oltion       July 2000

93           Thin Air                  Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith                August 2000      

94           Challenger          Diane Carey        August 2000

95           Swordhunt         Diane Duane      October 2000    

96           Honor Blade       Diane Duane      October 2000

                Cloak                     S. D. Perry           June 26, 2001

               The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh, Vol. 1   Greg Cox             June 26, 2001

               One Small Step       Susan Wright July 31, 2001

97           In the Name of Honor    Dayton Ward     January 20, 2002

              The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh, Vol. 2    Greg Cox            April 23, 2002

              The Last Roundup              Christie Golden      June 25, 2002

              The Edge of the Sword    Kevin Ryan              June 25, 2002

              Killing Blow                          Kevin Ryan            July 30, 2002

              River of Blood                     Kevin Ryan            July 30, 2002

              Gemini             Mike W. Barr            January 25, 2003              

              Garth of Izar         Pamela Sargent and George Zebrowski February 25, 2003           

             The Case of the Colonist's Corpse                Tony Isabella and Bob Ingersoll  December 30, 2003

              Ex Machina           Christopher L. Bennett  December 28, 2004

                To Reign in Hell: The Exile of Khan Noonien Singh   Greg Cox                        January 4, 2005

              Seeds of Rage         Kevin Ryan      March 29, 2005

              Burning Dreams           Margaret Wander Bonanno               July 25, 2006

              Provenance of Shadows                 David R. George III          August 29, 2006

               The Empty Chair                Diane Duane                      November 2006

               The Fire and the Rose     David R. George III         November 28, 2006

               Demands of Honor           Kevin Ryan                      January 30, 2007

               The Star to Every Wandering       David R. George III        February 27, 2007

               Sacrifices of War                Kevin Ryan                      December 30, 2008

               Troublesome Minds        Dave Galanter   May 26, 2009     

               Inception              S. D. Perry           January 26, 2010              

               Unspoken Truth                Margaret Wander Bonanno        March 30, 2010 

               The Children of Kings      Dave Stern          April 27, 2010    

             Cast No Shadow            James Swallow        July 26, 2011      

             A Choice of Catastrophes                Steve Mollmann and Michael Schuster  August 30, 2011

              The Rings of Time              Greg Cox             January 31, 2012              

             That Which Divides             Dayton Ward     February 28, 2012           

              Allegiance in Exile              David R. George III          January 29, 2013              

             Devil's Bargain      Tony Daniel        February 26, 2013           

             The Weight of Worlds       Greg Cox             March 26, 2013 

              The Folded World              Jeff Mariotte     April 30, 2013    

             The Shocks of Adversity   William Leisner  May 28, 2013     

             From History's Shadow     Dayton Ward     July 30, 2013      

             No Time Like The Past       Greg Cox             February 25, 2014           

             Seasons of Light and Darkness      Michael A. Martin            April 28, 2014    

             Serpents in the Garden    Jeff Mariotte     April 29, 2014    

           The More Things Change  Scott Pearson    June 23, 2014    

           Foul Deeds Will Rise             Greg Cox             November 25, 2014        

            Savage Trade         Tony Daniel        February 24, 2015           

            Shadow of the Machine   Scott Harrison    March 9, 2015   

            Crisis of Consciousness      Dave Galanter   April 28, 2015    

            Child of Two Worlds            Greg Cox             November 24, 2015        

            Miasma                                Greg Cox                February 22, 2016             

            The Latter Fire       James Swallow                 February 23, 2016            

           Elusive Salvation                       Dayton Ward                                  April 26, 2016    

           Captain to Captain                     Greg Cox                                   June 28, 2016

           Best Defense                             David Mack                                 July 26, 2016

           Purgatory's Key              Dayton Ward and Kevin Dilmore      August 30, 2016               

           The Face of the Unknown     Christopher L. Bennett              December 27, 2016        

           The Captain's Oath                   Christopher L. Bennett                May 28, 2019   

           The Antares Maelstrom          Greg Cox                                        August 13, 2019               

             The Higher Frontier            Christopher L. Bennett                       March 10, 2020            

            Agents of Influence            Dayton Ward                                         June 9, 2020  

             A Contest of Principles     Greg Cox                                                 November 10, 2020    

            Living Memory                      Christopher L. Bennett                        June 15, 2021

            Harm's Way                      David Mack                                     December 13, 2022