(Copy of review posted on my Facebook page on May 27, 2020.) Yesterday (in the wee morning hours, Monday morning), I finished reading Drastic Measures by Dayton Ward (2018), the second book in the series of “Star Trek: Discovery” tie-in novels.
I have to say that Dayton Ward is probably my favorite of the authors currently writing Star Trek novels (although, I have to admit that I’m only just now getting back into reading the Trek novels and am probably not familiar with many of the current writers’ work). In 2018, I read Ward’s In History’s Shadow (2013), a Star Trek original series (meaning Kirk, Spock, McCoy, etc.) novel and I thought that was really good.
I think he surpassed it in Drastic Measures, though. Ward has a gift for both engaging plots while at the same time knowing the familiar characters from the Star Trek tv shows and movies so well that they always are perfectly in character.
The plot of Drastic Measures, like the previous novel in the series that I also just recently read, David Mack’s Desperate Hours, takes place mostly in a time period prior to the start of the “Star Trek: Discovery” CBS All Access tv series (which itself is a prequel to the classic 1960s “Star Trek” series). The choice to set many of the novels before the tv series was because they were being written prior to any of the tv episodes coming out (and the first novel before the tv series had even started filming). Also, media tie-in authors generally don’t know what directions an in production tv series are going to take over the course of a season, so it’s usually safer to set one’s novels sometime prior to the then currently airing tv season.
Drastic Measures takes place ten years prior to the start of “Star Trek: Discovery”, and features two “Discovery” characters who don’t actually ever meet each on the tv series, Philippa Georgiou (later captain of the U.S.S. Shenzhou) and Gabriel Lorca (later captain of the U.S.S. Discovery; well, sorta).
Here, they are Lt. Lorca and Commander Georgiou. Lorca is stationed at a remote Starfleet outpost on a Federation colony planet, Tarsus IV. A disease suddenly and rapidly spreads throughout all of the crops and other food on Tarsus IV, putting the thousands of colonists there in danger of starving. Georgiou is reassigned to a ship being sent there to bring much needed supplies, medicine, and other aid to the colonists.
However, before Georgiou and the ship she has been temporarily assigned to can arrive, the desperation of the colonists (who do not knew that aid is only days away rather than the weeks or months they were first told) leads to the removal of the governor overseeing them and her replacement with a man named General Kodos.
Now, fans of the original 1960s “Star Trek” series are as already familiar with Tarsus IV and Kodos from the episode “The Conscience of the King”, in which we first learn of Captain Kirk’s own history as a teenager on Tarsus IV and of this same food crisis that happened when he and his family lived their. And we learn of the “Tarsus IV Massacre”, and the role that “Kodos the Executioner”, as he came to be called, played in causing it.
So, this novel, Drastic Measures, takes that original series Captain Kirk back story event and ties into it younger versions of Georgiou and Lorca from “Discovery”. Lorca is driven by intense personal grief to hunt down Kodos and his followers, who have fled the major city center to hide out in a nearby mountain range that interferes with sensors and other detection devices. Georgiou, who outranks him and is leading the recovery efforts, can tell that Lorca is too emotionally involved but still allows him to lead the search to bring Kodos to justice.
That’s all I think I’ll say, other than this was one of those books that I never really wanted to put down and would read long into the night. That alone gets it the rating I’m giving it on GoodReads, four stars out of five. I highly recommend this one for fans of “Star Trek: Discovery”, and also fans of the original “Star Trek”. As it takes place prior to “Discovery”, I don’t think it’s necessary to have seen “Discovery” to enjoy Drastic Measures (although it will probably make it a more satisfying read to already be familiar with the characters of Philippa Georgiou and Gabriel Lorca).