...is Star Trek: New Frontier wildly and horrendously inaccurate?
Before I continue I'd like to say how much I appreciate Peter David as a writer, and every trek book I've read by him (except the most recent one) has been thoroughly enjoyable, hugely convincing and fantastically compelling, but...
***Spoilers for Star Trek: New Frontier #3-Restoration for those that haven't read it***
McKenzie Calhoun: Does he have a reason for keeping that scar? He doesn't seem proud of it, and there are dermal regenerators for a reason, that's why we don't see masses of people rushing around with scars after all the ship and interpersonnel combat we see on TV... Also, if we're all supposed to love him so much then it'd be nice for him to be a little more believable (more intelligent than everyone else, stronger, faster, more agile... sigh). I'm pretty sure that there's a starfleet regulation against contamination of culture, which he flouts, before he even realises someone on the planet has had contact with aliens.
Elizabeth Shelby: OK, she was annoying in Best of Both Worlds, so the reasons behind her being Mac's voice of reason are completely understandable but... Captain and then Admiral within a few books? I don't know if it's the case that Mr. David actually worships the ground she walks on, but that's sure how it comes over. She all but violates the Prime Directive early on, completely ignoring her first officer (taking lessons from Janeway in that regard but for the fact that Janeway knows the Prime Directive is there for a reason and therefore doesn't violate it). She then steamrollers over her first officer and provides her with a tremendous amount of grief for very little, and pretty much bullies a non-Federation world into joining, holding them to the sword as she does. What makes it worse is that she then denies she did it. And people seem to believe her.
Montgomery Scott: Turns up for no reason on about page 270 out of 320 odd. Lovely to see him, but serves absolutely no purpose other than to pad out the last few chapters so we have to wait to see what's happening to Captain Calhoun.
Si Cwan: Am I really reading a novellisation of a Jet Li film? Come on, please.
"McMac": What? No. Just no. Star Trek's cheesy, but it's not that cheesy.
Safety Protocols: How many episodes of Star Trek have you seen where an officer dies in the holodeck because they disengaged the safety protocols? Of their own accord? For recreation? I count...none. Please reference one so I can at least feel a little better about this. Plus, are we really supposed to buy the fact that a Starfleet Officer of sound mind and correct training, a Chief of Security no less, would really meet their end by having their head stoved in by Thor? Er, no. We aren't. Get a frickin grip.
Maestress Cawfiel: I've seen grannies who are basically wizened old crones jump up and bully off for a game of tonsil hockey with people half their age. Happens all the time. I was like "... WHAT?"
Garbeck's drunken stupour: Let's spend as much time as possible rehashing ALL of the drunken clichés we can. It'll be fun, and not at all annoying or a waste of time.
Don't get me wrong, there were some really nice elements to the story. Rheela and Moke were believable characters and I wanted to see what happened to them, hence the reading the whole book. That aspect to the story was largely well handled.
It just made me... angry.
Anyways, if anyone has any angle into redeeming this book I'm open to it. PLEASE convince me I didn't waste hours of my life reading it, or make me feel better by agreeing with some of the points above!
Before I continue I'd like to say how much I appreciate Peter David as a writer, and every trek book I've read by him (except the most recent one) has been thoroughly enjoyable, hugely convincing and fantastically compelling, but...
***Spoilers for Star Trek: New Frontier #3-Restoration for those that haven't read it***
McKenzie Calhoun: Does he have a reason for keeping that scar? He doesn't seem proud of it, and there are dermal regenerators for a reason, that's why we don't see masses of people rushing around with scars after all the ship and interpersonnel combat we see on TV... Also, if we're all supposed to love him so much then it'd be nice for him to be a little more believable (more intelligent than everyone else, stronger, faster, more agile... sigh). I'm pretty sure that there's a starfleet regulation against contamination of culture, which he flouts, before he even realises someone on the planet has had contact with aliens.
Elizabeth Shelby: OK, she was annoying in Best of Both Worlds, so the reasons behind her being Mac's voice of reason are completely understandable but... Captain and then Admiral within a few books? I don't know if it's the case that Mr. David actually worships the ground she walks on, but that's sure how it comes over. She all but violates the Prime Directive early on, completely ignoring her first officer (taking lessons from Janeway in that regard but for the fact that Janeway knows the Prime Directive is there for a reason and therefore doesn't violate it). She then steamrollers over her first officer and provides her with a tremendous amount of grief for very little, and pretty much bullies a non-Federation world into joining, holding them to the sword as she does. What makes it worse is that she then denies she did it. And people seem to believe her.
Montgomery Scott: Turns up for no reason on about page 270 out of 320 odd. Lovely to see him, but serves absolutely no purpose other than to pad out the last few chapters so we have to wait to see what's happening to Captain Calhoun.
Si Cwan: Am I really reading a novellisation of a Jet Li film? Come on, please.
"McMac": What? No. Just no. Star Trek's cheesy, but it's not that cheesy.
Safety Protocols: How many episodes of Star Trek have you seen where an officer dies in the holodeck because they disengaged the safety protocols? Of their own accord? For recreation? I count...none. Please reference one so I can at least feel a little better about this. Plus, are we really supposed to buy the fact that a Starfleet Officer of sound mind and correct training, a Chief of Security no less, would really meet their end by having their head stoved in by Thor? Er, no. We aren't. Get a frickin grip.
Maestress Cawfiel: I've seen grannies who are basically wizened old crones jump up and bully off for a game of tonsil hockey with people half their age. Happens all the time. I was like "... WHAT?"
Garbeck's drunken stupour: Let's spend as much time as possible rehashing ALL of the drunken clichés we can. It'll be fun, and not at all annoying or a waste of time.
Don't get me wrong, there were some really nice elements to the story. Rheela and Moke were believable characters and I wanted to see what happened to them, hence the reading the whole book. That aspect to the story was largely well handled.
It just made me... angry.
Anyways, if anyone has any angle into redeeming this book I'm open to it. PLEASE convince me I didn't waste hours of my life reading it, or make me feel better by agreeing with some of the points above!