Wednesday, May 31, 2023

SPOCK IS TALKING TO SOMEONE

 

Name: Star Trek: The New Voyages 2 – Story 5 “Cave-In”

Author: Jane Peyton

Publication Date: 1/1978

Publisher: Bantam Books

Page Number: 6

Historian’s Note: I have no idea   

Cast of Characters:  Commander Spock              some unidentified person

Starships and/or Starbases: none

Planets: unknown

My Spoiler filled summary and review: Spock is talking to someone.  Who it is I have no idea. It might be Captain Kirk, it could also Dr. McCoy, and could also be someone else who don’t know.  The voice is teasing Spock about his origins.  Calling him an experiment that the Vulcan Government allowed Sarek to engage in.  Spock denies this but the voice keeps insisting, even going so far to suggest that was the only reason his mother was allowed to raise him: an experiment to see how he a Vulcan/human hybrid would turn out.  At one point the voice apologizes to Spock for annoying him and getting him in this predicament.  Spock says it is equally both their faults. 

Some strange voice is talking to him. 

Additional thoughts: The editor asks us to approach this one with an open mind and I did.  However, I still didn’t like it.  Its not a story.  It reads like some dialogue borrowed from a larger story and then dumped on to a page without any context.  We have no idea who Spock is talking to or what is going on?  I know they’re trapped somewhere.  The title of the story is “Cave-In” so I suppose that is what happened, but I have no idea.

Should it be canon: What is there to add to canon?

Cover Art: What I wrote on the review for story 1:

The cover has the Enterprise flying in front of what appears to be a wrecked space station.  Both appear to be in orbit around a planet that you can see part of in the corner.  There is this red haze that surrounds everything.

Final Grade: Final Grade 1 of 5

 

Monday, May 29, 2023

Trapped Like Rats

 


Name: Star Trek: The New Voyages 2 – Story 4 “In the Maze”

Author: Jennifer Guttridge

Publication Date: 1/1978

Publisher: Bantam Books

Page Number: 28

Historian’s Note: Sometime after The Second Season of the Animated Series   

Cast of Characters:  Captain James T. Kirk         Commander Spock              Dr. Leonard H. McCoy AKA “Bones”              Lieutenant Commander Montgomery Scott AKA “Scotty”        Lieutenant  Hikaru Sulu              Lieutenant Nyota Uhura          Lieutenant Wardoff          Ensign Pavel Chekov      several unnamed security crewmen    Unnamed insect-like alien

Starships and/or Starbases: USS Enterprise NCC-1701

Planets: Unnamed planet in a feudal state

My Spoiler filled summary and review: The Enterprise in sent to a primitive planet that has been labeled “off limits” by the Federation following the Prime Directive.  The reason they are here is there is a structure that would impossible for a feudal society the planet has to have built.  While doing scans Kirk loses his patience with their non-success and, over Spock’s objections, sends down a landing party.  However, they soon lose contact with that party.  Kirk then decides to lead a new landing party to find them. 

                Dressing in native garb, Kirk, Spock, Dr. McCoy, and a number of security personnel beam down to the planet.  They come to complex and they find a door. They open it and Kirk goes in and disappears.  Spock and McCoy follow and disappear as well, but they disappeared together and end up in the same place.

                Spock and McCoy wake up in a dark corridor and as they walk down it, they find many connected hallways some of them leading to dead ends. McCoy at this point states it is like they are walking around in a maze (thus the title of the story).  Some of these places are dangerous, have different environments, and at one point Spock almost loses a foot to one of creatures in there with them. 

                Meanwhile elsewhere in the structure, Captain Kirk has found himself in a cage.  The entity keeping him prisoner is a large insect-like creature.  They seem to be some laboratory and Kirk can see the creature watching Spock and McCoy struggle on the viewer.  Kirk tries to find away out but is unable.

We can simulate anything we want.
                Then everything ends.  It turns out that this insect-like alien is a scientist who was unaware the people he was experimenting on either the Starfleet officers or native inhabitants of the planet were in fact intelligent sentient lifeforms.  It had been operating under the assumption that they were no more than lab rats.  When it sees Kirk responds emotionally to what he sees on the monitoring screen, it suddenly realizes, to its horror, that the experiments they were conducting were on people like them. The creature immediately releases all the officers and apologizes for the horrors caused and the deaths of two of the first landing party. It turns out the whole maze was in an illusion making device of the alien—like an environmental simulator seen in “The Practical Joker.” The alien is prepared to leave the planet as soon as the Enterprise does. 
We didn't want this!


Additional thoughts: Neil deGrasse Tyson, the famed science educator, once engaged in a thought experiment with the question “would aliens find us intelligent.” The idea is simple: take the difference between humans and chimpanzees.  Chimps live in the jungle and eat bugs, while humans have an international space station.  What is the smartest chimp capable of doing?  Setting up an umbrella perhaps?  Human children can do that.  Maybe an alien may look at what are smartest scientists can do and it reminds them of the capabilities of children.  Humans are just dumb animals.


                That is basically what this story uses. Aliens so far beyond humans and other humanoids that they don’t even notice the other living creatures are smart. It then combines that idea with a similar one from the classic episode “The Devil in the Dark.” The concept of not everything that maybe big and scary is necessarily bad.  This time however it is not the humans not understanding that the silicon-based Horta is intelligent, it is the bug alien that doesn’t see that in humans.  When it finally realizes what it’s doing, the alien becomes really remorseful just like the miners in the earlier mentioned episode.  It goes from being a scary monster to just another explorer.

Should it be canon: Yes, absolutely this story would be a great little addition to Star Trek canon.

Cover Art: As I stated in the first story:

The cover has the Enterprise flying in front of what appears to be a wrecked space station.  Both appear to be in orbit around a planet that you can see part of in the corner.  There is this red haze that surrounds everything.

Final Grade: Final Grade 4 of 5

 

Friday, May 26, 2023

KIRK TAKES DOWN ANOTHER AI

 


Name: Star Trek: The New Voyages 2 – Story 3 “The Patient Parasites”

Author: Russell Bates

Publication Date: 1/1978

Publisher: Bantam Books

Page Number: 40

Historian’s Note: Sometime after The Second Season of the Animated Series   

Cast of Characters:  Captain James T. Kirk         Commander Spock              Dr. Leonard H. McCoy AKA “Bones”              Lieutenant Commander Montgomery Scott AKA “Scotty”        Lieutenant  Hikaru Sulu              A number of unnamed crewman

Starships and/or Starbases: USS Enterprise NCC-1701

Planets: unnamed barren planet

My Spoiler filled summary and review: The Enterprise has uncovered a strange energy source coming from this barren planet.  Since they are here to explore the unknown, they go to check it out. Although not good for long-term survival, the planet’s air is breathable.  Captain Kirk sends a landing party down lead by Spock with Sulu and a number of unnamed security personnel as well.  This turns out to be a bad idea for they find that the energy that drew them here has turned now a massive energy cloud, and as they get close the energy cloud suddenly expands to envelop the landing party.

                Having failed to beam the landing party up, Kirk leads a new landing party down to the planet.  They find their missing crew mates trapped in a construct contained in this energy field with their minds, according to the tricorder, in a state of flux.  Using their phasers, they are able to free Spock and Sulu but not the others. Considering these are red shirts to most fans it will seem their fate is sealed.  

Landing party quickly captured!

                Then it is revealed that the construct is an artificial intelligence called the Finder.  Its creators sent the Finder and others like it to search the universe for technology.  This finder’s personal mission is to locate a design for faster than life travel.  It is designed to capture those who may have this technology and transfer their minds back to the Finder’s creators.  That is what it intends for those still within the forcefield. It is not the most efficient way of producing technology however the Finder’s masters’ culture teaches them that patience is a virtue and good things come to those who wait. 

                What the Finder doesn’t know is it is going up against James T. Kirk, the Bane of All Artificial Intelligence.  The Finder was doomed the moment this encounter happened. It’s already dead it just doesn’t realize it yet.

This crew can take down anything AI

                After the senior officers all talk it over, they conclude that the Finder’s creators were a bunch of space parasites.  They don’t invent anything they just try to steal it from others.  This makes them dangerous, and Mr. Spock goes so far to suggest they may have to sacrifice the crewmen captured to prevent it.  McCoy’s horrified but he has forgotten that red shirts usually die.

                Sulu suggested they look for its power source and that plan panned out.  Realizing that the Finder is tapping into the sun for a power source, the Enterprise cause an artificial solar eclipse. The Finder however adjusted to this trick by tapping directly into the Enterprise.  Kirk orders Scotty to cut the ship’s power long enough to disable the Finder’s abilities.  During this time Mr. Spock finds something interesting, the Finder’s creators were a people called the Tullvans.  The most interesting thing about them is that they went extinct over 1800 years ago.  So, if the Finder tries to send minds over space there won’t be anyone on the receiving end.

                Kirk now has the information he needs to kill this AI. He lets the Finder know his origins and as expected the Finder now wants to die. While it is dying, the Finder releases the redshirts, so no redshirt is sacrificed today. They all head back to the Enterprise and onto their next adventure.

Additional thoughts: This story was originally attended to be an episode for Star Trek: The Animated Series. It was rejected because it didn’t “make use of the potential in animation” enough, what ever that means.  Mr. Bates would get an episode made which would be “How Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth” in the show’s second and final season.

                This would have been a fine episode and uses many traditional Star Trek troupes.  They are fighting and artificial intelligence that one point almost pulls the Enterprise out of the sky, which we have seen before in both “The Return of the Archons” and “The Apple.”  McCoy and Spock fight about many things.  The ship is threatened by a civilization that no longer exists. Both Mr. Sulu and Mr. Scott contribute in critical moments.  Kirk talks a machine into killing itself.  Most importantly for the “anti-woke how dare Star Trek have politics in it crowd,” there are no female characters in it so no woman could possibly do anything. (That last sentence was called sarcasm for those who might be reading this but are not smart enough figure that out. I know most of you are smart enough but there are always the occasional fools.)  Finally, the episode did forget to have the redshirts die, but every now and again Kirk and crew should be able to save them. 

Nowhere to be found!

Should it be canon: I see no reason it shouldn’t be.  It was written by an actual Star Trek writer to be an episode.  It definitely fits the lore.

Cover Art: What I said after the first story:

The cover has the Enterprise flying in front of what appears to be a wrecked space station.  Both appear to be in orbit around a planet that you can see part of in the corner.  There is this red haze that surrounds everything.

Final Grade: Final Grade 3 of 5

 

Monday, May 22, 2023

Nurse Chapel to the Rescue

 


Name: Star Trek: The New Voyages 2 – Story 2 “Snake Pit”

Author: Connie Faddis

Publication Date: 1/1978

Publisher: Bantam Books

Page Number: 34

Historian’s Note: Sometime after The Second Season of the Animated Series   

Cast of Characters:  Captain James T. Kirk         Commander Spock              Dr. Leonard H. McCoy AKA “Bones”              Lieutenant Commander Irvin Domberwicky         Nurse Christine Chapel          Ensign Pavel Chekov      Administrator Gehres      many unnamed Hualans      

Starships and/or Starbases: USS Enterprise NCC-1701

Planets: Vestalan

My Spoiler filled summary and review: The Enterprise has been sent to the planet Vestalan to deal with a diplomatic disaster.  Vestalan is the home of a species of snake called coatls, whose venom is used to make Derivative 249. D-249 is used to treat pan-human neurotransmission disorders.  Thousands of lives are at stake.  Federation rules and morals demands that they don’t take any without the permission of the local inhabitants, a primitive people called the Hualans.  The Hualans are organized into a cult and that cult lately sees that the omens have turned on the Federation.  They refuse the to allow the taking of the snakes and Administrator Gehres has sent two representatives to talk to them. The Hualans then turned the two representatives into sacrifices. 

                The reason the Enterprise was chosen for this mission was not due to the usual excuse of their being the only starship in the sector, rather because the Enterprise’s expert in anthropology, Lt. Cmdr. Domberwicky has direct successful experience with the Hualans.  Nurse Chapel was chosen for the landing party as she had been to this planet before with Roger Colby.  Vestalan itself is an interesting planet, hot enough it long ago melted its polar ice caps and what little land it has left is very tropic. In addition to that the planet is small like Earth’s moon with the gravity to match.  So, they get to travel with great leaps in a single bound.

Chapel doesn't like things that remind her of Roger

                Domberwicky doesn’t return so Kirk and Chapel go looking for him.  They get captured by the Hualans.  While captured some of the Hualans enter their cell and beat on Captain Kirk, when he refuses to let the female Hualan molest him. When they beat on him enough, they leave, and Kirk asks Chapel if these people ever had any nice traits.  Later they come back and drag Captain Kirk out of his cell bringing him somewhere and leaving Chapel behind.

                Domberwicky finally returns and tells Chapel he has made a deal with the Hualans to release them.  She can leave now as they have already returned Captain Kirk to the ship.  She calls him a liar and he admitted it. He says Kirk has already been sent to the snake pit and is as good as dead.  Chapel, remembering how upset Spock was when he thought Kirk was dead in “Amok Time” refuses to leave without him.  She goes down to wear the snake pit is.  Kirk is in there sounded by dangerous animals who want to leave him and pools of lava.  He is wounded, mostly naked with sunburns, and barely conscious.

A traumatic experience for Mr. Spock

                Chapel, remembering she was told the Hualans often get drunk at these ceremonies and are prone to gambling.  She tells Domberwicky to see if they will allow her to rescue him with only her knife and she bets she can do it without injury.  Domberwicky does this and the Hualans are eager and start taking bets about this among themselves.  The conditions are Chapel will be allowed to try with only her knife as a tool and she will have to be completely naked.

                Chapel agrees to this and she strips down and attempts her rescue.  Chapel leaps into the pit and with the low gravity is able to leap her way to the Captain.  She defeats some of the snakes, and then lifts the Captain up in a fireman’s hold.  With the Captain secure she carries him out of the snake pit.  This impresses the Hualans so much that they see Chapel’s success as an omen that they want the Federation around.   Chapel has saved Captain Kirk, completes the mission, and there will be plenty of Derivative 249 for everyone. 

All is right in the world

Additional thoughts: Well, that was fun little story.  I complained in my last review about the supporting cast not getting its due and this story delivered.  The whole story is told from Chapel’s point of view. I liked in the beginning how we learned about Chapel’s unhappiness with this assignment as it brought up memories of Roger.  I also enjoyed how one of the reasons she is determined to save Kirk is because of her affection for Spock.

                The fact that planet had such low gravity made it easier to imagine that Nurse Chapel could lift Captain Kirk over her shoulder and carry him out. It created quite the visual in my mind.

                I always think it’s weird when we are introduced to a lieutenant commander we haven’t meet before.  That is the rank that both Dr. McCoy and Scotty hold. It was also the rank that Mr. Spock held in the first season.  Since Sulu is the third officer of ship, I think most other officers should be beneath him in rank with exception of some doctors.

                I did take a little bit of issue with the story claiming that Chapel was already a doctor who just took the job of a nurse. The author apparently got this idea from Majel Barrett, according to the footnote.  However, it is clearly stated later (yes, I am violating my rule of talking about future Star Trek in a review) in The Motion Picture that she recently became a MD.  That was my only issue and its minor. 

Should it be canon: I don’t have any problem with this story line being added to the canon of Star Trek.  I think it would be a great addition.

Cover Art: As I said after the first story

The cover has the Enterprise flying in front of what appears to be a wrecked space station.  Both appear to be in orbit around a planet that you can see part of in the corner.  There is this red haze that surrounds everything.

Final Grade: Final Grade 4 of 5

 

Friday, May 19, 2023

HAPPY BIRTHDAY CAPTAIN KIRK


Name: Star Trek: The New Voyages 2 – Story 1 “Surprise!”

Author: Nichelle Nichols, Sondra Marshak, and Myrna Culbreath

Publication Date: 1/1978

Publisher: Bantam Books

Page Number: 31

Historian’s Note: Sometime after The Second Season of the Animated Series   

Cast of Characters:  Captain James T. Kirk         Commander Spock              Dr. Leonard H. McCoy AKA “Bones”              Lieutenant Commander Montgomery Scott AKA “Scotty”        Lieutenant  Hikaru Sulu              Lieutenant Nyota Uhura          Nurse Christine Chapel          Ensign Pavel Chekov      Mori       Mori’s parents       Mori’s grandfather

Starships and/or Starbases: USS Enterprise NCC-1701

Planets: Arcos

My Spoiler filled summary and review: The adventure begins as the landing party returns from a successful diplomatic mission from Arcos.  The key to their success was the team saving the life of the young grandson of the primary member of the ruling triumvirate.  The child, named Mori, was particularly charmed by Lt. Uhura.

All of the transporter pad we are taking a picture

                It is also apparently Captain Kirk’s birthday tomorrow and the crew is arranging a surprise party for him.  What plays out for the rest of the story is a comedy of errors, as two primary things get in the way of the goal of giving the Captain a nice birthday.  The first is Captain Kirk is not being particularly responsive to being directed by his crew to go places for certain reasons. Kirk has no clue to what is actually going on and spends most of the story getting annoyed at his crew for showing up late to duty and openly annoying him.   The second issue is there is an alien entity on board.  That entity is messing with the starship’s equipment.  At one point the food remixer starts shooting out cake and making a mess of things. A new problem emerges in the form of a communication from Arcos that indicates that Mori is missing his friend.  

                Everything quickly resolves itself. It turns out this entity that can assume a hairy physical form is the friend that Moir is missing. Once he is brought back the Enterprise’s equipment returns to normal. Captain Kirk gets his birthday party and he gets his present from Spock as soon as he beats the Vulcan at chess. Kirk’s present is a grand master’s certificate given how many games of chess he has prevailed at.

Additional thoughts: As much as I love Star Trek, some of its great supporting characters are criminally underused. Considering that this story was written by Nichelle Nichols you would think that Lt. Uhura would be given a little more attention.  Nope, this is a story about Kirk and Spock like almost every other Star Trek story. The only thing that Lt. Uhura gets is a statement about how great she is with children, and Captain Kirk confiding to Spock that he wishes he could give Lt. Uhura her birthday spanking.  Really, Nichelle!

"So, you're saying the Captain wants to spank me? It's almost like I wrote this story!" 

                The story was fun but everyone’s characterization seemed to be a little off. For example, Spock at one point picking Kirk up over his shoulder and carrying him away from the mess hall where they are making his cake and setting up the party, with Kirk protesting the whole time.  The story seemed to try to be “The Practical Joker” but didn’t have the same level of success.

This man is not having a fun time in either story.

                Also, something that I found really weird is in this story Kirk and Spock seem to share a bathroom that connects both their quarters.  This is strange for several reasons one of which I was sure that Kirk and Spock’s quarters were on opposite sides of the corridor.  In the story they use this set up to play chess with each other one play at a time when one just so happens to walk by their quarters.  In a small subplot Spock has Uhura make his move for him and Kirk catches is her as he just came out of the shower and accidently drops his towel.   

Should it be canon: No, because the characters act way too weird, so unless the strange creature that snuck aboard is revealed to be responsible it should remain a fun “what if story.” 

Cover Art: The cover has the Enterprise flying in front of what appears to be a wrecked space station.  Both appear to be in orbit around a planet that you can see part of in the corner.  There is this red haze that surrounds everything.

Final Grade: Final Grade 2 of 5

 

Monday, May 15, 2023

A STRANGE PLANET, A STRANGER PEOPLE, AND A STANGE ADVENTURE

 


Name: Planet of Judgment   

Authors: Joe Haldeman  

Publication Date: 8/1977

Publisher: Bantam Books

Page Number: 151

Historian’s Note:  Sometime between The Counter-clock Incident and The Motion Picture

Cast of Characters:  Captain James T. Kirk       Commander Spock              Dr. Leonard H. McCoy AKA “Bones”              Lieutenant Commander Montgomery Scott AKA “Scotty”       Lieutenant Commander Andre Charvat           Lieutenant  Hikaru Sulu              Lieutenant Nyota Uhura              Lieutenant Sharon Follett                Lieutenant Hevelin           Lieutenant Bill Hixon          Nurse Christine Chapel          Ensign Pavel Chekov      Ensign Bish Davoff            Ensign Frost            Ensign Octavio Hernandez          Ensign Alan Huff              Ensign Bill Johnson           Ensign Sikh            Ensign Rosaly Ybarra             Crewman Mark Moore          Dr. James Atheling           Captain Mohammed Tafari       Lieutenant Tabakow                Crewman Delacroix           The Arivne main voice       Irapina (three representatives)

Starships and/or Starbases: USS Enterprise NCC-1701, USS Lysander NCC-540, five unnamed shuttlecrafts

Planets: Anomaly

My Spoiler filled summary and review: The Enterprise is transporting Dr. James Atheling to take over the science department at Starfleet Academy.  In his short stay, Dr. Atheling, has become something of a celebrity among Spock’s department.  While on their way the ship encounters a rouge planet.  A rouge planet is a planet flying through space attached to no solar system.  Yet, this one is out right bizarre.  For it has an Earth-like atmosphere.  It also seems to be orbiting a black hole as its “sun” despite the fact that such a system should be impossible.  Since their primary mission is to explore strange new worlds, Kirk decides to take a detour and explore this little world.

They plan to transport to the service but when Kirk has his landing party available it is discovered that the transporter, for some reason, is not working. So, the Captain instructs Scotty and his engineers to get to work on the transporters in the meantime he will take his party to the surface via shuttlecraft.  They take a shuttlecraft to the surface and while the trip was fine the landing party discovers as soon as they land that the shuttlecraft suddenly stopped working.  The engine is off and the communication system is out.  As far as their individual equipment goes everything but the communicators are working. 

Shuttle stuck on the ground

With the landing party not communicating with the ship, it made Mr. Spock wonder if his they were still alive.  This is kind of extreme scenario to jump to as there may be many things keeping the landing party from communicating however Spock says that would be the most logical.  They find the shuttle on the planet but the sensors do not indicate any life forms. Spock sends a security team on a second shuttle and when as soon as they touch down the Enterprise loses all contact with them. Spock decides that instead of having just two shuttles trapped on the planet he might as well have all five. He organizes a much larger landing party to make use of the three shuttles. He decides to lead the mission himself and leaves Scotty in command of the Enterprise. Spock orders the Chief Engineer to take the ship to the Academy planet for support if they are unable to maintain contact. (We learn that Starfleet Academy has a whole planetary campus that we never heard about, more on that later.)  With that the three shuttles leave the Enterprise and head down to the planet.

Now with all shuttles down on the planet and stuck the combined landing parties organize and form a perimeter to best defend themselves against whatever might be out there.  The team is caught between the Prime Directive and its own survival.  Among the landing party is Dr. James Atheling.  It turns out the Academy professor is actually a commodore in the Starfleet reserves, and pulled rank to go on the mission.  Kirk sends out scouting teams to search for food in case they run out of rations. Over the next two days however they lose two crewmen.  They discover that the native life forms, who were responsible for one crewman’s death, have hair all over their bodies and they don’t have anything that looks like eyes or ears.  Their mouths have no tongue their hands have four long fingers.  However, things really hit the fan when Lt. Bill Hixon gets attacked and begins to physically transform into one of the planet’s native inhabitants.  When they find him his eyes and ears are missing, but he has gained the ability to communicate telepathically.  Everyone in the landing party is horrified by what happened except for Nixon himself.  The mutated human seems to think the changes are great and he is better for them.  I almost wanted to say “where we’re going, we don’t need eyes to see” but that is in a different science fiction story.

Going to the rescue

They learn from the mutated comrade they learn that the people who live on this planet are the Arivne. (Arivne is actual a Vulcan term but these people think term explains them so they adopt it.) The Arivne want to test their visitors but they do not clarify the reason.  Then through some unknown power they are able to transport all those of the landing party and the shuttlecrafts back onto the Enterprise. The only people they keep are the science and medical officers.  When the remaining party realizes that their companions and transports are going, McCoy accuses them of murder.  The Arivne explain what they actually did and begin their tests.  They force the remaining party to relieve some of their most unpleasant memories.  Spock relives the events of “Amok Time,” McCoy relives the day his wife and child left him and he decided to join Starfleet in response, Atheling revives a moment of guilt when cheated in college, and the others also experience equally unpleasant things.


Back on the ship the crew is relieved to have its Captain back no matter how strange it is, but they want to know what the Arivne plan to do with their missing colleagues.  Lt. Uhura also discovers that the Enterprise is repeatedly sending out a message to Starfleet designed to look like it comes from Captain Kirk.  The message states that they have encounter a virus that has wiped out a third of their crew, and caused the survivors to hallucinate.  The message was so convincing that for a moment they wondered if maybe they were hallucinating and did an attendance check to find out that the crew who were listed as dead were actually alive. Kirk then orders the Enterprise to return to the Anomaly planet.

At this point the Arivne confess to the remaining Starfleet crew.  They are aware of a malevolent alien race bent on conquest called the Irapina.  These nasty creatures are insectoids whose elite rulers use the lower classes for involuntary organ donation to make themselves immortal.  The Arivne became aware of them do to their extreme telepathic powers, and were able to communicate. At first the Arivne were hopeful that Irapina would just ignore them and instead conqueror the rest of the Alpha Quadrant. However, the more they “talked” to them the Arvine came to the conclusion that they could not trust the Irapina at to leave them alone.  So, they decided to scare them off by telling them of the Federation.  In order to scare the Irapina, they built up the Federation to be far powerful than it actually is.  The Irapina now want to test in contest wills the Federation and their Starfleet officers.

The Enterprise’s trip to the Anomaly planet is delayed when they are stopped by the USS Lysander.  The Lysander has been ordered to bring the Enterprise in.  Not wanting to fire on a Federation starship, Kirk surrenders.  That is when the Arvine arrive, they now want the Enterprise back, so they let Captain Tafari of the Lysander know the truth of the matter and demonstrate their abilities to alter perceived reality.  Tafari agrees to let the Enterprise go with the understand that he and Kirk will need to be witnesses in each other’s court-martial. 

Not being patient, the Arvine use their powers to bring Kirk back to the planet before his ship can get there.  They sent everyone else back but quickly recalled McCoy because he was needed.  The Irapina has sent three representatives to perform in the challenges.  It turns out these challenges take place on a plane of illusion where all six members were put into a trance and their minds were linked in a simulation.  McCoy’s simulated competition was a poker game.  Despite all the normal rules being ignored McCoy wins and his opponent is killed by his other two comrades.  Kirk and Spock compete with their opponents at the same time but on different fields.  Kirk is a battle of old wooden ships on the high seas. (Since Kirk is based off Horatio Hornblower, I wonder if this is an intended easter egg by the author.)  Spock is completing with science knowledge.  The Irapina are cheating but Kirk and Spock beat them anyway.

Kirk fighting in a different type of enviroment than he is used to.
1743 oil panting by Samuel Scott

The Irapina end the simulation and attack them in real life.  However, the bugs learn that Captain Kirk is greatest fighter in the known universe whose skills always leave his opponents spell bound.   Spock is not a bad fighter, either.  In addition, the Arvine augmented the strength of the two officers, allowing Kirk and Spock to throw entire trees at their opponents.  

The Irapina gave up.  They decided that when they get to this sector of space, they will go an invade the Romulans instead because the Federation was far too dangerous an opponent.  With that it was time for the crew of the Enterprise to leave.  As they left the Arvine removed from Enterprise’s computer banks the location of the Anomaly planet.  So that in the future they will be left alone.  

Additional thoughts: When I first read the back cover to this story, I thought we were going to get something similar to “Shore Leave.”  I like “Shore Leave” nevertheless I was pleased that this book was nothing like that.  I thought the claim from the back cover of “Never before had their systems, instruments and weapons failed to respond” as false. I can think of a number of times that has happened for different reasons.  However, since I started this blog to begin my own personal re-journey through the franchise of Star Trek, this story is much better written than all the ones that preceded it.  I have read a number of Star Trek books so I know this won’t remain the case as this journey goes on but it is my favorite one reviewed so far.

A very different adventure

I like the use of both Star Trek’s actual past in the series as well as making new content to tell the story.  When the Arvine were making the landing party relive their past, is the best example.  Spock was forced to go the memory of getting rejected by T’Pring, having the challenge issued, and the battle where Spock thought he killed Kirk.  Haldeman’s description gives the reader a “re-watch” of “Amok Time,” but there are added parts as well.  Such as Spock’s internal thoughts on the matter of the rejection.  The challenge is viewed as old fashioned even though it is still law.  Most Vulcans who don’t want to marry their parents’ choice usually go through the ceremony and get an annulment later.  However, the annulment is a shameful embarrassment to both families but it is still better than the challenge.  Here the reader can see how deep this rejection really was to Mr. Spock.

The only thing I didn’t like was the added dialogue.  In this re-telling T’Pau tells T’Pring that once this marriage is complete, she will be like chattel to the winner, with no rights at all.  This baloney Vulcan society does not treat its women like that.  They are equals.  Now, in the episode it did say she would be the “property” of the winner.  I never took that to mean in the literal sense.  I always assume it was just some vestige term from a time Vulcan had a more patriarchal society.  Like “the father ‘giving’ his daughter away” in Western society.  It meant something different along time ago, but nowadays it is just a loving tradition between father and daughter not a property exchange.  However, T’Pau’s new dialogue rejects my interpretation and hammers home the woman-as-property status.


McCoy’s trip to the past made him relive the day his wife and daughter left him.  McCoy’s work obsession kept him at the hospital so long that his marriage fell apart. Once dumped he finds an ad for Starfleet medical officers.  It was some nice background into one of Star Trek’s most popular characters and I enjoyed it. 

I thought what the author did with the other characters was interesting too.  Lt. Follett re-living her decision to get an abortion so she wouldn’t have to postpone a career in Starfleet was a daring decision.  Roe v. Wade was only four years old when this book came out, and the author chooses to include but not make that big of a deal.  By the 23rd century a woman’s right to body autonomy is a given.  Too bad that is not true in the 21st century.

Modern Star Trek fans might find a bit of a shock that prior to Star Trek IV it was common to hear Starfleet officers to talk about money.  Dr. Atheling talked about how he used to have to work in order to cover expenses that his scholarships weren’t paying.  It had its benefits because it allowed him to cheat on an exam.

I also enjoyed when they went for a second round of bad memories, Spock had a moment where he was rejected by his human cousins, who tried to frame him for something they did.  This ended the relationship of Amanda and her sister.

I though the Arvine reminded me of the Talosians.  They had similar powers and they needed the less evolved species to help them do something they could not.  Unlike the Talosians, the Arvine were also highly intelligent.  I do like when it was mentioned that the Arvine tried to contact the Organians for help.

The Arvine just as powerful and more intelligent than these three!

So, Starfleet Academy has its own planet?  Why? So, they have a San Francisco campus and a second campus that takes up an entire planet. If you have a planetary campus then what do you need the smaller one for? Not to mention the massive distance between the two would make the set-up seem improbable.

Lastly, I want to talk about Kirk’s willing surrender to Captain Tafari of the Lysander.  This is such a difference from the traditional Star Trek troupe of defying any order that the characters think is wrong. In a typical story Kirk would have been “sorry I know my friends are in danger, I can’t let you stop me.”  And he might even go so far to engage in battle with the other vessel to the point of crippling it.  Afterwards they would just ask for forgiveness that they always seemed to receive off screen.  In this little story once Kirk realizes that Tafari’s orders of genuine he just complies.  There is even no sign in Kirk’s internal monologue about breaking free and getting back to the Anomaly planet.  

Should it be canon: I would have no problem having this story as official canon in Star Trek lore. It fits all my normal standards.  Like most episodes of the classic series, the book is a self-contained adventure, where everything has returned to the status quo for all the main characters. No major event or discovery effects any of the traditional alien cultures such as the Vulcans, Klingons, or Romulans.  There are some continuity conflicts such as the book’s instance that Starfleet Academy has its own planet. I don’t see these being any different than the many later contradicted statements in the original series. 

Cover Art: The cover features the USS Enterprise as seen from slightly below the port side. The ship appears to be flying over some skyscrapers.  The viewer cannot see much below the skyscrapers because of clouds that obscure it.  Behind the starship is a moon.  Overall, it’s a striking image.

Final Grade: Final Grade 4 of 5