M
Mr. Crane
Guest
just finished reading the Crucible trilogy. The first book was awesome!
Crucible: Kirk, also came up with a clever way of un-duing Kirk's death from Generations, but I just couldn't buy Kirk's actions aboard the shuttlecraft. Here's what I mean...
So, if you recall, "Future Nexus Kirk" travels back to the 2293 via the Guardian of Forever and beams "Enterprise-B Kirk" off the Ent-B just before he enters the Nexus. "Future Nexus Kirk" then tells "Ent-B Kirk" that he must let everyone think he is dead, as history recorded, travel to the Guardian of Forever planet, and use the time portal to travel to the future to help a guy naed Picard stop a villain named Soran from destroying a planet "Ent-B Kirk" has never heard of ... (Veridian III). So, he would need to leave everyone he knew, let them think he was dead, to save this supposed "future"...
Now, from what I saw of Kirk in TOS, he was never the overly trusting type when it came to be tmysterious beings that swept him off his ship told him what to do - he was often suspicious and defiant at first (Example: "What does God need with a starship!?"). Yet here, "Ent-B Kirk" just goes along with what his "future self" tells him with very few question, all because the guy knows intimate details about his life. The Kirk I know would question whether this was an alien being who had probed his mind, and was attempting to manipulate him. Kirk was a survivor ... I think he would question why he is supposed to sacrifice his life to maintain a possible future chain of events that, from his perspective, havn't happened yet, all based on the story told to him by someone claiming to be his "future self". I think Kirk would argue that his destiny is not pre-determined, nor is the future.
Heck, I don't think most people would sacrifice their lives if some guy came up to them claiming he was from the future, and claiming that they needed to pretend to die to preserve the future, even if the guy looked exactly like you! - but, hey, maybe that's just me!
I really enjoy David George's writing, but I just found that idea hard to swallow.
What do other people who have read the book think?
Crucible: Kirk, also came up with a clever way of un-duing Kirk's death from Generations, but I just couldn't buy Kirk's actions aboard the shuttlecraft. Here's what I mean...
So, if you recall, "Future Nexus Kirk" travels back to the 2293 via the Guardian of Forever and beams "Enterprise-B Kirk" off the Ent-B just before he enters the Nexus. "Future Nexus Kirk" then tells "Ent-B Kirk" that he must let everyone think he is dead, as history recorded, travel to the Guardian of Forever planet, and use the time portal to travel to the future to help a guy naed Picard stop a villain named Soran from destroying a planet "Ent-B Kirk" has never heard of ... (Veridian III). So, he would need to leave everyone he knew, let them think he was dead, to save this supposed "future"...
Now, from what I saw of Kirk in TOS, he was never the overly trusting type when it came to be tmysterious beings that swept him off his ship told him what to do - he was often suspicious and defiant at first (Example: "What does God need with a starship!?"). Yet here, "Ent-B Kirk" just goes along with what his "future self" tells him with very few question, all because the guy knows intimate details about his life. The Kirk I know would question whether this was an alien being who had probed his mind, and was attempting to manipulate him. Kirk was a survivor ... I think he would question why he is supposed to sacrifice his life to maintain a possible future chain of events that, from his perspective, havn't happened yet, all based on the story told to him by someone claiming to be his "future self". I think Kirk would argue that his destiny is not pre-determined, nor is the future.
Heck, I don't think most people would sacrifice their lives if some guy came up to them claiming he was from the future, and claiming that they needed to pretend to die to preserve the future, even if the guy looked exactly like you! - but, hey, maybe that's just me!

I really enjoy David George's writing, but I just found that idea hard to swallow.
What do other people who have read the book think?