Wednesday, April 30, 2025

AN ENEMY WHO BECOMES A FRIEND


 

Name: My Enemy, My Ally

Author: Diane Duane

Publication Date: 7/1984

Publisher: Pocket Books (Star Trek #18)

Page Number: 210 (Hardcover)  309 (paperback)

Historian’s Note: Two years after the events of The Immunity Syndrome.  Most likely between season 1 and 2 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 Commander Lia Burke                     Lieutenant Hikaru Sulu              Lieutenant Nyota Uhura            Lieutenant John Kyle     Lieutenant Harb Tanzer          Lieutenant Athendë           Dr. Joseph M'Benga              Lieutenant Roz Bates                Lieutenant Jerry Freeman               Lieutenant Harrison                Lieutenant Janíce Kerasus                   Lieutenant Mahásë             Lieutenant Colin Matlock              Nurse Christine Chapel          Ensign Pavel Chekov                 Ensign Brand           Ensign Hwavirë                   Ensign Lihwa                Ensign Robbie London           Ensign Dahai Iohor Naraht          Yeoman Third Class Yeoman Harry Matshushita                 Crewman Amekentra          Crewman Eisenberg        Crewman Feder           Crewman Edward Fisher Crewman Paul         Crewman Remner        Crewman Rotsler          Crewman Satha      Captain Nhauris Rihaul        Commander Aroun Yihoun                 Lieutenant Commander Lellyn UUriul            Dr. Lahiyn Roharrn           Lieutenant Syill         Captain Mike Walsh            Commander  Raela hr'Sassish       Dr. Aline MacDougall         Lieutenant Commander Iwao Sasoaka             Captain Suvuk         Commander Sehlk      Lieutenant Commander T'Leiar                 Dr. Sobek              Crewman Setek           Crewman T'Kiha      Crewman Si'jsk                Commander-General  Ael i-Mhiessan t'Rllaillieu               Subcommander Tafv ei-Leinarrh tr'Rllaillieu           Nniol t'AAnikh         Dhiemn          Ejiul          Dr.  T'Hrienteh            Master Engineer Giellun tr'Keirianh              Hvaid t'Khaethaetreh                Khiy              Antecenturion Aidoann t'Khnialmnae          Khoal            Liha tr'Rllaillieu              N'alae            Commander LLunih tr'Raedheol           T'maekh

Starships and/or Starbases: USS Enterprise NCC-1701, USS Constellation NCC-1974, USS Intrepid NCC-1730, USS Hood NCC-1703, USS Potemkin NCC-1657, USS Inaieu NCC-2003, Arakkab, ChR Arien, ChR Battlequeen, ChR Bloodwing, ChR Courser, ChR Cuirass, ChR Eisn, Ehhak, ChR Helve, Hsaaja, ChR Javelin, Kenek, ChR Lahai, ChR Rea's Helm, ChR Wildfire, Ykir

Planets: Levaeri V, Earth, Romulus, and Remus

My Spoiler filled summary and review: This Star Trek adventure begins not with our heroes, but with those who fans regard as the enemy.  The Romulan Star Empire is the oldest adversary for the United Federation of Planets.  We are introduced to Commander-General Ael i-Mhiessan t'Rllaillieu henceforth referred to as Ael, an extraordinarily successful military commander.  However, politics have been removed from her traditional command of the Bloodwing and instead assigned to the Cuirass.  This was done to separate her from her loyal officers and place her with those installed by her political opponents. 

Bloodwing

On the Federation side, Kirk and Spock are now playing 4-D chess, a new game.  Kirk starts to lose but McCoy takes cover and beats Spock.  While discussing this the Enterprise is summoned to the Romulan Neutral Zone.  While on the Romulan side Ael has discovered something horrible that the imperial government is doing that it makes her question her loyalty.  Not to the Empire but to its Senate and Praetors.  She devices a plan where she escapes her present ship and returns to her old command and loyal crew.  When they are given the information from her the crew agrees to join her on her quest.

At the Neutral Zone the Enterprise joins several other starships including the new Constellation and Intrepid.  They have an all-staffs meeting where they decide to come up with a plan to deal with the Romulans.  However, before they are finished the Bloodwing shows up and the Ael wants a meeting with Captain Kirk.  Ael has fought Captain Kirk on many occasions, and they respected each other as rivals.  They agreed to meet.  They engage in some small talk, and we learn that it was Ael’s niece that that Kirk and Spock had tricked in “The Enterprise Incident.”  This originally made her despise Captain Kirk, Mr. Spock, and the rest of the Enterprise.  However, as time went on, she came to see her adversaries as honorable people despite what happened to her dear niece.  As “good to meet you” conversation came to an end that is where Ael gives them some shocking information.

Commander Ael's niece 

The information she gives them is this.  The Romulan Empire has been raiding civilian vessels that had been carrying Vulcans.  They kidnap the Vulcans and use the bodies for experiments in order to capitalize on the telepathic capabilities that the Romulans seem to have lost to evolution.  They are using Vulcan biological material to create a telepathic superweapon.  This knowledge is what caused Ael to become disillusioned with the Empire and wants to help Starfleet to stop it.  Where this monstrosity is located is on a Starbase orbiting the planet Levaeri V, which is deep in Romulan space.  Ael proposes that they allow her and her crew to “capture” the Enterprise and bring it in is a prize before they attack the base together. 

She agrees to a mind meld with Mr. Spock, but Kirk doubts they will be able to cooperate with this plan.  There are too many X-factors and Kirk couldn’t justify risking his ship.  However, they then received news that the Romulans using this new Vulcan bioweapon were able to capture the new Intrepid.  Kirk is now forced to go along with the plan.

As they sneak into Romulan space with the Enterprise pretending to be the prisoner of the Bloodwing, the two crews get to know each other.  There is much cultural exchange, and friendships are made at all levels from the commanders to the doctors, and even a good deal of the regulars on each crew.  The first Romulan ship they encounter has an arrogant commander who will not except explanations and insists on inspecting the captured ship.  This results in a quick battle that ends in that ship’s destruction.  

The Enterprise captured

They get to their destination and organize a giant landing party to free the Intrepid crew, their ship, and destroy this weapon the Romulans have created.  They run into two unexpected problems.  The first is the weapon is made of biological matter from the earlier Vulcan victims an it’s alive.  Spock now wants to rescue and not destroy it so it can have a home on Vulcan.  Also, the Subcommander of the Bloodwing, Tafv, who also happens to be the Commander’s son, betrays his mother and her cause by leading the younger members of his crew to try to steal the Enterprise for real.  Sulu and Chekov lead a resistance to this.  Both the problems on the ship and on the ground are resolved by our heroes shooting their way out. When the Enterprise, Intrepid, and Bloodwing are ready to leave they defeat the Romulan fleet which was sent to stop them.   Tafv was mortally wounded in the battle, and he is dying but he lives long enough to explain to his mother that he did what he did to avenge his cousin on Kirk and Spock. She then takes his life as custom dictates she must to a traitor, although he was going to die anyway.    

The two leading the ship resistance.

In the end the Federation is in a good position, the Starfleet characters are set to resume their lives, while Commander Ael embraces her new existence, taking her ship elsewhere to become a freelance operator in space.  Kirk is fine with this so long as she doesn’t take up piracy.

Additional thoughts: When “The Search for Spock” was being written the Romulans were supposed to be the villains.  Nimoy changed it to the Klingons because he wanted to explore their culture more.  This is why the Klingons in that film had a cloaking device on a ship called a bird of prey.  This book gives the Romulans a chance to shine.  However, it is one that pits Romulan against Romulan.  The honorable ones vs. the corruptible.

Okay, one error the author has in this book is forgetting that Kirk is better at chess than Spock.  Spock is a scientist; Kirk is a military tactician.  Often Kirk’s “illogical” thinking confounds and confuses him.  We first see this in “Where No Man Has Gone Before” and in “Court Martial” Kirk, thinking his career is over, tells Spock “Maybe he can beat his next captain at chess.”

Kirk is more the master

This book takes place toward the end of the five-year mission but what is neat is when Intrepid arrives it is clearly the Constitution-class refit design, the Enterprise herself will have by "The Motion Picture."  It is also a little sad because it is a reminder that this is the first Star Trek adventure that features the Enterprise where we know her final fate.  We know the ship will survive this because she is fated to die in orbit over the Genesis planet. 

I really enjoyed the Horta character, Ensign Dahai Iohor Naraht.  The Devil in the Dark” is one of the great episodes of the original series. It challenged us to look at life and recognize that the monster in the dark might not be a monster at all.  The Horta looks like a moving pizza, but the Silicon-based life gives them a great advantage in certain situations.

Horta

Commander Ael is a great role model for someone serving in a regime that turns fascist. In the end of the day Ael is a Romulan patriot but she will stand by while her government commits these horrible Josef Mengele-type crimes.  She will even defect to her traditional enemies if she can see they have honor.  Yet, she never supplies the Federation with more information than they need to stop these atrocities, and they do not get any real advantage over the Empire.  It is also interesting to compare her actions to those that Kirk will take in “The Search for Spock” when he betrays Starfleet for the life of his friend. There are limits in his betrayal because he won’t give up Genesis to the Klingons even to save Spock. 

I do like that Kirk doesn’t jump on board immediately with Ael’s plan.  For one it was too great of a risk.  She easily could have been a Romulan plant and given that the Romulans and Vulcans are kin she may have been able to resist or trick a mind meld.  Kirk only agrees when he has no better option. 

In an earlier pair Star Trek novels The Price of the Phoenix and The Fate of the Phoenix, the Romulan Commander from “The Enterprise Incident” shows up as an ally to Kirk and Spock.  This something I found ridiculous considering what they did to her in that episode is something that no one would just brush off as no big deal, and the fact that the Romulans would still have in her in a high-profile position after that major mess-up is absurd.  In this book, her Aunt Ael gives her a more realistic fate, in her explanation of the aftermath of that encounter.  That she was stripped of her command, rank, and House.  This rendering her a non-person in Romulan society.  No one knows where she is now or what she is doing.   

Her fall only makes sense.

I felt the use of the Romulan language to be distracting, it was interesting at first, but I had to keep reminding myself that Rihannsu and Romulan are the same thing as the author keeps using the former.  I don’t mind them mentioning it once but since every other word I don’t see why they don’t continue to use throughout the book.

Something I found odd, so the Enterprise is summoned to the Neutral Zone with four other starships.  So, you have four separate equally ranked captains and command staff, don’t you think a flag officer such as a rear admiral or commodore would have been sent to direct operations instead of a committee of captains?  I thought that the absence of one was very odd. 

Overall, I thought this was a good story.  However, I do feel the ending was a bit rushed. There was a lot of time building up to this but when the final event came it was just “shoot and get out of there”-type scenes.  

Should it be canon: I see no conflicts with stories depicted in the action or animated series of any of the shows.  So, I have no issue with this book being accepted into the general canon of Star Trek.

Cover Art: The cover art is pretty cool.  It has Captain Kirk on the front holding what I think is a Romulan disruptor because it doesn’t look like any phaser I have seen.  Behind him is Commander Ael holding a similar weapon and behind both is a futuristic looking city.

Final Grade: Final Grade 3 of 5

 

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

THE SEARCH FOR SPOCK, THE BOOK

 


Name: The Search for Spock   

Author: Vonda N. McIntyre

Publication Date: 6/1984

Publisher: Pocket Books (Star Trek #17)

Page Number: 297

Historian’s Note:  NA

Cast of Characters:  Rear Admiral James T. Kirk       Dr. Leonard H. McCoy AKA “Bones”              Commander Montgomery Scott AKA “Scotty”       Commander Hikaru Sulu              Commander Nyota Uhura              Commander Pavel Chekov         Commander Max Arrunja           Lieutenant Commander Kyle                Dr. Christine Chapel          Lieutenant Commander Janice Rand                Lieutenant  Saavik            Lieutenant (Junior Grade) Foster        Fleet Admiral Harrison Morrow                    Captain J.T. Esteban                    Commander Miguel Darby                            Captain Lawrence H. Styles                  Lieutenant (junior grade) Heisenberg                    Dr. David Marcus              Commander Kruge          Torg            Maltz               Ambassador Sarek                    Valkris             T’Mei        T’Lar  

Starships and/or Starbases: USS Enterprise NCC-1701, USS Grissom NCC-638, USS Excelsior NX-2000, Earth Spacedock, IKS B'rel

Planets: Earth, Genesis Planet, and Vulcan

My Spoiler filled summary and review: Since this is a review of the book version of the movie Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, there is no need to provide a summary of the story as I already did that in my last review.  So, I am just going to focus on the differences between the book and the movie.

1.       The opening scene is during a wake for Spock and the rest of the dead.  This scene is not in the movie, in fact I would say 2/3 of this book is material not in the movie.  The wake is a disaster, bad alcohol is served, and everyone is messed up.  Kirk tries to revive his old relationship with Carol and gets shot down.  Carol becomes angry and revels that she had a boyfriend recently who was one of the scientists killed by Khan. Their son David is luckier in his love life as he ends up sleeping with Saavik.  We learn the reason Spock’s coffin survived is because Saavik altered its course. Instead of Spock’s body burning up in the atmosphere she placed it to be absorbed by the genesis wave.   

2.       Sulu is a captain in the book and referred to such throughout even though in the movie he is just a commander.  

3.       In the book Kirk and David’s relationship still is not reconciled with Kirk reaching out but David continuing to slap him away.  David’s personality often comes up in the book as just a spoiled brat where in the movies he is just helpful. 

4.       The Grissom shows up and its Captain Esteban, not Admiral Marrow, who tells them Genesis has become a hot topic and Starfleet has classified everything.  It turns out Kirk and Esteban go far back, and Esteban has a long list of accomplishments that proceed Starfleet trusting him with this assignment. 

5.       Carol Marcus refuses to help the Grissom investigate Genesis as she has to contact the relatives of her team who were killed by Khan.  She has lots of services to go to that are her priority.

6.       David fights to get himself invited to go with the Grissom.  This makes Kirk sad because David didn’t want to spend time with him.

7.       McCoy’s break into Spock’s quarters is not the first sign something is wrong with McCoy; it is rather the final cumulation of what was a growing problem.  McCoy muttering stuff in Spock’s voice to both Kirk and Saavik on a number of occasions.   

8.       Kruge and Valkris are not together like the movie implies.  The book versions never meet.

9.       Scotty had further objections to going to the Excelsior.  One being his nephew’s funeral.

10.   There is an interesting scene where Scotty’s niece says she wouldn’t trust Kirk because both times he went back to the Enterprise the Captain died.  

11.   Kirk informs Sarek on stronger terms about why he didn’t bring Spock’s body back to Genesis.  In the movie Kirk is unaware of this even being an issue.  Where in the book the reason he acted as he did is that the Vulcan people had often mistreated Spock and therefore, he felt no obligation to follow their wishes over Starfleet customs. 

12.   Kruge killing of subordinate is less of a random scene.  In the movie, after the destruction of the Grissom, Kruge killing his gunner is something done in sudden anger.  Where in the book the gunner is ordered to undergo a ritual suicide.  He refuses and is then vaporized via Klingon disruptor. 

13.   Explains that Uhura locked the young Lieutenant in the closet so that he wouldn’t get in trouble for their actions.  It also shows that Sarek helped Uhura get off Earth and to Vulcan.

14.   When Kruge orders the death of one of the prisoners the Klingon on the ground tries to get Saavik to take her own life she attempts to escape, and David is killed in the struggle.  

15.   Klingon landing party start hearing the countdown as soon as they get onboard.  Which makes them seem stupider.  Maybe they should have called about the counting beforehand?   

16.   After they escape Saavik clears the way on Starfleet channels their captured Klingon ship to make it to Vulcan.

17.   The risks of refusion are explained in greater detail. The biggest is that no one has tried this science antiquity, and they don’t know that the result was.  Most of the time the dead Vulcan body doesn’t suddenly come alive again, so no refusion attempt is even tried.

Requesting refusion
  

Additional thoughts: When I read the novelization of The Wrath of Khan, I found myself wondering if the differences between the book and movie were based on changes to the screen play that were made by making the film.  With this book I feel a little different.  The differences that the book version of TWK had compared to the film are still present in this book.  For example, in this book Kirk still didn’t know David was his son until Carol told him in the Genesis Cave, David and Saavik continuing their relationship, and Sulu is a captain.  It is if the author wanted to book continuity to line up regardless of what when on in the film.  I will acknowledge that the books line up well and if you are just the reader should be satisfied.  However, in order to continue the books’ themes, it causes larger diversions as we go forward.  As such, we get almost halfway through this book before we get to content that we saw on screen.

One of these continuity questions is the author’s “Captain Sulu” obsession.  She describes him as a Captain despite the fact that in both films Sulu was a commander and wore said uniform.  Also, in this book the author acts like Sulu was already in command of the Excelsior prior to TWOK.  This doesn’t add up with the films because in TWOK Sulu is clearly an instructor at Starfleet Academy, as he is seen on the bridge simulator during the Kobayashi Maru test.  It doesn’t make sense for him to leave his command to go on a training cruise as a favor to Kirk.  The book goes so far to suggest that Sulu even had a hand in designing the vessel.  Sulu’s background is in space aviation and botany.  Captain Styles is not Sulu’s predecessor but rather the man who stole his ship.  It comes off as so weird.

I like the addition of Saavik being responsible for Spock’s body’s survival.  That’s the type of addition that novelization can bring.  It would have taken too long in the movie for Saavik to explain her decision-making process, especially when all Spock’s body is survived. The quick gravity-well soft landing is fine for the movie, but the book allows for greater detail.  I also like the explanation of why David is on the mission and his mother is not.  One of them goes to Genesis and the other took care of making sure their friends and colleagues received proper burials and family notifications.

David and Saavik romantic couple in the books

   There are elements of the book I don’t care for such as David’s beef with his father.  Book David often comes off as jerk in a way movie David didn’t.  It makes less sense in the book for him to be this be this way, seeing as his father had no idea he existed until recently.  Unlike the movie version who did.  The book’s tragedy is that Kirk never resolved the issues with his son, where in the movie the tragedy is losing a son so soon after reestablishing contact.
A character about to be lost

Another element I didn’t particularly care for, although others may like it, is the author devoting so much time to characters who don’t matter.  I didn’t need Valkris’s entire backstory which included the struggles with the alcoholic brother and her difficulties leading her house.  Nor did I care at all for Carol’s lover Vince Mason’s family’s reaction to him being killed by Khan, and his personal contributions the Genesis project.  Also, Carol is bit of a cougar as her lover has David’s age.   We also go some clearly non canon reference to these Galaxy-class ships that can go literally to other galaxies, as the rest of the franchise note that is still quite impossible by Starfleet abilities.

One thing I really did like is David pointing out how this was not the ideal Genesis experiment.  That the device was not supposed to be activated inside a starship that itself was inside a nebula.  Genesis is still untested; I think it deserved a legitimate test. 

I really did enjoy Kirk’s internal monologue when setting the Enterprise to destroy itself. Kirk felt like the computer was sad.  He could hear the grief in its voice.  I really enjoy the description of the view from the surface of the planet Genesis.

“The Enterprise arced brilliantly from its orbit.  For an instant it was a comet, but the gravity of the new world caught it and held it and drew it in.  It would never again curve boldly close to the incandescent surface of a sun, never again depart the gentle harbor of Earth to sail into the unknown.  The Gravity of Genesis turned the dying ship from a comet to a falling star.  It spun downward, trailing sparks and cinders and glowing debris.  It touched the atmosphere and flared more brightly.” Pg. 254-5

In closing on the other good parts about the book is it did focus a little on what Sarek and Amanda had to go through.  From finding out their son had died, that they might have lost the katra, to maybe getting that back, to Spock might be coming back to life.  They experienced a parent’s worst nightmare only to have it reversed.   

Restored Spock

Should it be canon: I prefer to think of what we saw on screen as the canon version of events and the book is just a clever “what if?”.

Cover Art: The cover has Kirk flanked by McCoy and Sulu.  Kirk has a phaser drawn and all three look awesome.  Spock’s face hovers in the background.

Final Grade: Final Grade 3 of 5