Nice. I love Pike books. Excited for this one.
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I wonder if the Captain's Oath will touch upon Kirk serving aboard the U.S.S. Republic and then later the U.S.S. Farragut.
It was just reading the blurb I sort of thought, hmm, sounds more like an original series novel. But I guess what you guys say is true, plus it apparently is part of the war that's part of Discovery, and the story may involve other elements of Discovery as well, making more sense for the Discovery banner.
(What was Kirk up to in S. D. Perry's Inception? I don't remember.)
The only book to even touch on Kirk as a captain pre-Enterprise was Enterprise: The First Adventure; it's pretty surprising that in 52 years of filling in every continuity hole, no one has ever gone for this before.
(What was Kirk up to in S. D. Perry's Inception? I don't remember.)
I assume that Gary Mitchell will be a character, though I suppose a literal reading of Dehner's line could allow for the interpretation that Kirk asked for Gary but didn't get him.
Also, Vonda McIntyre's Enterprise: The First Adventure posited the name "Lydia Sutherland" as being Kirk's previous starship command, a tie-in to C.S. Forester and Hornblower.I'm (re)reading the Horatio Hornblower novels right now, and he was one of Roddenberry's inspirations for Kirk. In the first novel Hornblower commands the Lydia, a frigate, but later novels delved into his backstory, and his first command was the Retribution when he was ranked commander. He commander three sloops-of-war before being entrusted with the Lydia, a frigate. So this seems to fit.
According to the TOS Writer's Guide, he did have a command before the Enterprise. And, regardless of how much of a prodigy he was, it's unrealistic that a young untested captain would be given one of the fleet's twelve most advanced starships as his first command.I don't know if I like the idea of Kirk commanding a ship before Enterprise. If it's because the captain was killed and he was battle promoted, that will be fine.
I just like the idea that the Enterprise was the first proper ship he took command.
Thanks!Having just reread this one, I can tell you: in 2261, Kirk was the First Officer of the U.S.S. Mizuki (holding the rank of Commander) under a Captain Olia and dating Dr. Carol Marcus, head of a civilian corporate-funded science team working on a terraforming project on Mars (and who during the novel found out she was pregnant). When Dr. Marcus' experiment was sabotaged by 23rd century eco-terrorists, Cmdr. Kirk was given temporary command of the U.S.S. Aloia, a brand-new Miranda-class ship in drydock at Utopia Planitia with less than a skeleton crew in order to fulfill Carol's request for Starfleet backup (after she realized nothing she and her fellow civilians could do on their own). When the crisis was resolved, Jim and Carol went their separate ways - Kirk on a deep space mission and eventually to the Enterprise and Carol on her way to creating the Genesis device (with a stop-over on Starbase 47/Vanguard in a few years).
Most of DC's comics outside of the ones reprinted by Titan are unknown to me, so thanks. (Hm, maybe I should add them to my list of comics to track down as single issues...)DC Comics touched on it twice -- Vol. 1 Annual 1 by Mike W. Barr showed Kirk leaving his command of the Saladin (named for the destroyer class in the Star Fleet Technical Manual but drawn as a Baton Rouge-class ship from the Spaceflight Chronology) to take command of the Enterprise from Pike, and Howard Weinstein's "Star-Crossed, Part 2" in Vol. 2 showed Kirk getting promoted to captain from first officer of the Eagle and heading out at the end on the Miranda-class Oxford.
Yeah, this makes sense. Lose Gary and you have a book with almost no familiar characters beside Kirk, I reckon.The full line is "Gary told me that you've been best friends since he joined the service, that you asked for him aboard your first command." That implies they've been pretty much inseparable, and that's the assumption most pre-"Where No Man" fiction has followed. It honestly never occurred to me not to include Mitchell in the book. After all, he's one of the few familiar faces in that era of Kirk's career, although you will see the beginnings of some of Kirk's relationships with characters he was shown to have a history with in TOS.
Oh yes! And I see from Christopher's post above, that Goodman was similarly inspired by calling Kirk's first command the Hotspur. Both choices seem a little on-the-nose.Also, Vonda McIntyre's Enterprise: The First Adventure posited the name "Lydia Sutherland" as being Kirk's previous starship command, a tie-in to C.S. Forester and Hornblower.
Ugh, I've got to disagree, the some of the last few books before the break had some of the worst covers I've seen in a long time. I really didn't like the last Rise of the Federation book, and Prey Book 3 covers. I really like these two covers though, they're the best we've gotten in a while.BTW the cover is nice too, a picture of Kirk in an early version of the uniform to set it in the proper timeframe, and the ship. I also liked the other covers as well. Since the Typhon Pact novels, the novels covers have improved. They were getting a little blah for a time during the early Typhon Pact novels but they're back to doing pretty cool covers again.
It also sounds like the Klingon War will play a role in it, and that is entirely a creation of Discovery.It's about what the Enterprise was doing during DSC season 1, so it's at least peripherally building on DSC continuity. And it may set up character or plot threads pertaining to Pike, Spock, Number One, etc. in season 2 (just guessing, I don't know if it will). More to the point, though, it's meant as a promotional tie-in to DSC season 2, aimed at viewers who like what they see of Pike, Spock, etc. on the show and want to see more, so it gets the DSC branding to attract their attention.
I think you forgot about some of it, I just saw it a couple weekends ago so the QT pilot is pretty fresh for me. It actually starts with Al in a car with a girl and they see a light in the distance, which it turns out is from the QT machine, and then he gets a call from Gooshi and they show Sam in the machine. They don't explain exactly what is going on, but we do see how Sam ended up starting to leap.On the other hand, you still had shows like Quantum Leap where the pilot starts out with Sam waking up in the past and only gradually finding out what's happened to him.
Ugh, I've got to disagree, the some of the last few books before the break had some of the worst covers I've seen in a long time. I really didn't like the last Rise of the Federation book, and Prey Book 3 covers. I really like these two covers though, they're the best we've gotten in a while.
From what it sounds like the Enterprise was on its way home because of the war when they got caught up in something unrelated.It also sounds like the Klingon War will play a role in it
Ugh, I've got to disagree, the some of the last few books before the break had some of the worst covers I've seen in a long time.
For me, it would be very interesting to find out, what Picard did in the eight years between losing the Stargazer and becoming Captain of the Enterprise.(Although isn't that exactly how Picard got his first command?)
For me, it would be very interesting to find out, what Picard did in the eight years between losing the Stargazer and becoming Captain of the Enterprise.
There is NO canon information about this time. Is there anything about it in any novel?
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