I think the last time I read Fire Ship was nineteen or twenty years ago. I've always liked it. Her other Star Trek novel that leans super-hard into the "fighting sail" tropes is Ancient Blood, in which Picard and Alexander explore a holodeck program about the Royal Navy during the American Revolution. I loved that.![]()
The specific aspect that made me think of Fire Ship while I was on Lady Washington was the plotline with Janeway judging that the crew was a bunch of over-familiar slackers who needed a dose of hard-ass military discipline. My experience was hardly comprehensive, but from what I've heard from other people, it was representative, with a crew made up of regular Joe-and-Jane professional sailors who were doing it as a career, semi-pro hired crew who were keeping busy during retirement or adventuring between aspects of a more conventional lifestyle, and volunteers like me who were dropping in for fun because they liked sailing, adventure stories, or were big ol' history nerds.
I'm curious if I were to revisit the novel in that light, would I see it as Carey having been disappointed by the casual vibe of one or more crews she'd been on, and taking that out on her fictional crew by having Janeway whip them into shape, or if she'd liked the vibe just fine, and was exploring a "what-if" scenario where a bunch of happy historical fun-time sailors had to take the seamanship skills they already had and recontextualize themselves as a disciplined, military crew? From what I remember, I think it's more likely the latter, since Janeway came away appreciating the camaraderie of being on a non-military crew, but the "Broken Bow" and "Endgame" novelizations definitely showed Carey wasn't too good for a little passive-aggressive editorializing, so I might've just missed her ragging on people she'd crewed with since I lacked context.