• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

"Shatnerverse"??

i doubt i'll read the latest Shatner book mostly cause Trek XI will end up covering similiar evens.
 
dreadful huh, anyone else? good bad or otherwise?

From the review I wrote last year for my blog:

Judith and Garfeld Reeves-Stevens are reliable writers. They know Star Trek. They can write. So there's always at least some pleasure to be had from the Shatnerverse novels. The problem, which may be their co-author's fault, is that the stories are so damned preposterous that there's just no way I can reconcile them with my sense of what actually happens in the Trekverse. (IOW, they don't fit into my personal continuity.)

Now, when you have a resurrected superhero version of James T. Kirk running around the 24th century and showing Jean-Luc Picard how to save the galaxy, preposterous is pretty much the starting point. Going back to the young Jim Kirk seems to offer the chance for a more realistic and believable kind of story. Something that could appeal to readers who find the 24th century Kirk stories just too hard to believe. Or you could just get a preposterous story in which the Kirk who saves the day and shows everyone how it's done happens to be a teenager.

Unfortunately, we get the latter.

Okay, maybe it doesn't strain credibility too much to have Kirk and Spock meet as teenagers before either joins Starfleet; canon doesn't give us any detail on how long they've known each other or when they first met. And canon doesn't say much about Kirk's brother, so maybe he was a drug addict involved in an alien crime ring before he ended up on Deneva with Aurelan and the kids.

But the idea that Kirk is a genius engineer and hacker, estranged from his father, just doesn't quite feel right to me. The idea that, even before joining Starfleet, he manages to steal the Enterprise from Spacedock and fight the bad guys and blow open an Orion conspiracy... well, that's where we go from "I'm not sure I buy that" to "this is utterly preposterous." James T. Kirk is not just some guy, sure, but making him so much of an overachiever so early takes away from the Hornblowerish self-questioning and self-doubt we see in some TOS episodes.

The portrayal of Spock as a somewhat insecure teenager still not fully in control of his emotions is solid and believable. He's handled pretty well in the story, but I'm not sure the Vulcan artefact smuggling that he stumbles across is really thought through. The bad guys are knowingly buying supposedly stolen forged Vulcan artefacts with tech that fools sensors into showing them as authentic in order to get the tect to use it for another purpose. But how did the process start? Did the bad guys think, hey, let's try to steal Vulcan artefacts, so they'll create fakes with the kind of tech we need? Did the Vulcans think, it is logical to assume that our artefacts may be stolen, and therefore they should all be replaced with forgeries equipped with technology that will enable them to deceive the thieves and their sensors? Maybe that was addressed somewhere and I missed it, but it felt like Braga/Menosky TNG/Voyager plotting: come up with a mystery, add a twist to the mystery, add a surprising explanation to the mystery, but don't look at it chronologically to see if it would actually make sense.

I did like the way the story dealt with the backstory from "The Conscience of the King." It explains why a farm kid from Iowa was on Tarsus IV, it explains why only a small number of survivors could identify Kodos (instead of everyone who wasn't killed during the incident), and it gives the young Jim Kirk some somewhat surprising but plausible characterization.
 
I think i agree with you there Steve....Kirk showing everyone in the present era of trek how everything is done was kinda hard to swallow. I thought having all these events happen that need kirk to fix like in the Captains... trilogy. I found that really hard to grasp how Kirk was a big part of the solution. That and the whole mirror universe thing. I think i like the other incarnation of the mirror universe better than his...not by much though
 
I just got a deal on Captain's Peril, Captain's Blood and Captain's Glory. Before those, all I've read in the Shatnerverse is Ashes of Eden and maybe The Return. But that was so long ago, I don't even remember what happened, something about Romulans and cloning, I believe. And weren't there some Borg in there somewhere?

At any rate the result is that Kirk is alive in the 24th century, right?

So what else do I need to know before reading Peril/Blood/Glory, because I'm not going to go back and read the whole Shatnerverse. Are there any big premise-style happenings that one must know beforehand? Shroud in spoiler tags if you feel that it would ruin things for others. As for me, ruin away. :)
 
Ive seen the comic version of his Kobayashi Maru Test and thought that was cool.

If you mean the one from the DC Comics storyline exploring the history of the Kirk/Carol Marcus relationship, its version of Kirk's Kobayashi Maru test was actually adapted from the novel The Kobayashi Maru by Julia Ecklar, albeit with a few dialogue tweaks. So Ecklar deserves the credit for that version.
 
Yeah thats the version i was thinking of. It was the DC comics second series issues 73-75 It showed Kirks last years at SF Academy, then his first posting, and then his first command, which at the time i was shocked wasnt the Enterprise, but i have since figured that all out. I did think it was weird that carol marcus was in starfleet for a while, btu hey thats why it was a good story, cause it had shocking events!
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top