Enterprise: Daedalus by Dave Stern

Blurb:
October 5, 2140. After a half-dozen years of research and testing, Starfleet prepares to launch its first warp 5 vessel -- Daedalus. Propelled by a radical new engine designed by Earth's most brilliant warp field theorist, Victor Brodesser, the new ship will at last put the stars within mankind's reach.
But on the eve of her maiden voyage, a maintenance engineer, Ensign Charles Tucker III -- "Trip" to his friends -- discovers a flaw in Daedalus's design. When he confronts Brodesser, the scientist -- as charismatic as he is brilliant -- eases Trip's concerns. The ship launches on schedule, and as Trip watches in horror, it explodes in a catastrophic ion cascade reaction, killing all aboard.
Thirteen years pass. Still haunted by memories of that disaster, Trip now serves as chief engineer aboard Enterprise. When a freak explosion cripples his vessel, leaving her helpless before a surprise attack, Trip is forced to abandon his ship -- and his shipmates. As he is on the verge of mounting a desperate rescue attempt, however, a shocking turn of events forces him to confront the ghosts of Daedalus one final time.
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My review from 2003:
A good novel.
Parts of the story aren't really new, i.E. it partly reminded me of Voyager: Fire Ship, and similar to Stern's previous Enterprise novel What Price Honor we again experience the novel from one crew members perspective, this time Trip. That way we only know what he knows/experiences. Like in What Price Honor I actually see the merit in this way of storytelling, as you get a closer connection to the main protagonist.
The novel is written very well and varied. Trip's big discovery at the end doesn't come too surprisingly for the attentive reader, but is a nice hook for the second book Daedalus' Children.
You can't say much about the characterizations of the ENterprise crew, since besides Trip and on a much smaller scale Hoshi they barely register in this novel. Trip's characterization is fitting in my opinion and the original charcters are well fleshed out.
Overall a very readable novel, creating interest in the continuation.