The cover for the annual had a blurb something like the one you remember. The story was about Kirk at Starfleet Academy.
"First time anywhere! Kirk's days at Starfleet Academy!"
The cover for the annual had a blurb something like the one you remember. The story was about Kirk at Starfleet Academy.
And it's terrible.Enterprise: The First Adventure was done to commemorate TOS's 20th anniversary.
And it's terrible.
Yeah, I was rather disappointed with it. As a continuity junkie I was always a bit put off that it really didn't take much account of the characters as featured in "Where No Man Has Gone Before." I get that they wanted to commemorate the original characters in the series proper, but I was hoping for a true first adventure for the crew and it didn't feel like one.
I was glad to see Christopher do an alternate take in his The Captain's Oath novel, something more in line with how Kirk actually was in those early days.
I could see the logic of it. E:TFA was the first giant novel, an "event" book that would've been marketed to a wider, more general audience than the hardcore fanbase. So it made sense, in that respect, to focus on the characters that were more familiar to a general audience.
I still remember before TCO thinking that the Enterprise was Kirk's first command. But when I considered it further I realized there was nothing precluding an earlier command, and then I read The Making of Star Trek and found out the intent was he did have an earlier command.
Regarding the Enterprise crew, Strangers From the Sky comes immediately after E: TFA and explains the crew from "Where No Man..." being basically a bunch of temps.As a continuity junkie I was always a bit put off that it really didn't take much account of the characters as featured in "Where No Man Has Gone Before." I get that they wanted to commemorate the original characters in the series proper, but I was hoping for a true first adventure for the crew and it didn't feel like one
I'll never understand why people would think it was Kirk's first command. The Constitution class ships were Starfleet's biggest, most powerful capital ships, not the kind of thing you give to an untested captain, the '09 film's nonsensical ending aside.
And it's terrible.
I can understand why you say that. A shockingly high percentage of the central conflict of the book is driven by the need by all involved to find sufficient living and performing space for a vaudevillian troupe's flying horse. (Yep.) But why is there a flying horse in a 'vaudevillian' act in the first place, given that the troupe was on its way to various starbases along the Federation-Klingon frontier? What frontier starbase would possibly have the space to give this creature free rein? Reading it (for the first time) six months ago I couldn't shake the feeling that Vonda M. (1) really wanted to write a book about horses but (2) got a commission to write the Enterprise's first adventure and so (3) one way or another the Enterprise was going to encounter a horse on its first voyage, logic and reader interest be damned. And it is not plausible that on his first mission as captain, Kirk would immediately become so undisciplined as to spend his first days as a captain mooning, lovelorn, over Lindy the horse wrangler and plot strangler.
More like four years away. Kirk is twenty-nine in Enterprise: The First Adventure.I'm a big fan of E: TFA. Are the TOS crew a bit out of character? Sure, but it's a prequel. They haven't become those people from TOS yet. "The Man Trap" could be up to a year away.
I'm a big fan of E: TFA. Are the TOS crew a bit out of character?.
All of Fleet Command's recent updates have focused on adding characters and content from the prime timeline, so the Kelvin timeline is dead in that game too.It's a pity the Kelvin comics ended so many years ago. I presume the Kelvin timeline content outside of Star Trek: Fleet Command is dead.
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