well i'm through chapter 11 of
ex machina. and i got so wrapped up in it last night i took a break to watch "for the world is hollow and i have touched the sky" just to get a sense of
yonada, the fabrini, the oracle, and what the heck natira looked like, again. a couple notes there before commenting on the book:
- the third season of TOS is wonderfully cheeky, and i still enjoy it, but more in a mystery science theater kind of way. that old "space hippy" getting zapped by the oracle was hilarious.
- also the oracle itself, which appears to be a star of bethlehem from a child's christmas pageant, made out of aluminum foil and painted gold. the hallways resemble a motor lodge outside fresno, california.
- the thing about watching the remastered HD episodes of TOS, especially season 3, is you can really appreciate how much they did with so little. they were literally making sets out of baling wire and krazy glue.
- i had misremembered and thought that mccoy got fatally sick on
yonada, not that he found out he had a year to live at the very start of the episode.
i should like to note to
@Christopher that my memories of first reading this in 2005 appear to have been faulty (and i was in my 20s versus my 40s). this is
not a trek title weighed down with boggy exposition. in fact, the expository passages are delicious, the best parts of the novel imo! i especially liked the bit about light relative to warp speed, the sort of physics for dummies take (which makes a whole lot of sense!), but it's beautifully positioned as a setup for why this alien is patrolling, looking for people entering her system via warp.
other odds 'n' ends...
- "kirk the godkiller" indeed, this is a nice nickname for the guy who spend a handful of episodes talking computers into taking their own lives, or dethroning various alien deities.
- lindstrom. i had to look him up. from "the return of the archons" (the one with the red hour and landru and being of the body yada yada). since he's been given the first name of christopher, is he the mary sue of the tale? inquiring minds want to know.
- is the introductory chapter quote by john gill actually from the nazi planet episode, or is it crafted for this story?
- the scene with mccoy coming clean with natira and her throwing him out seemed overly dramatic until i watched "for the world is hollow and i have touched the sky." then the tone felt quite appropriate. in fact when i skimmed back over that passage, i could see the actress hamming it up just like on the show. it occurred to me that the next time i read a trek novel with strong ties to other material, i should just binge watch all of that right before i start reading, so everything is fresh.
- "spock, do you think i have a...pattern of abandonment" this will do as the essential description of episodic sci-fi until another one comes along. break something in an hour (or fix it) and then move on like nothing happened. shows that don't serialize, to extend the metaphor, must be "frightened of commitment."
- soreth strikes me as the kind of vindictive vulcan who populated archer's enterprise show.
- speaking of archer's enterprise, this is indeed the text where
@Christopher explains its absence on the rec deck in TMP. the picture in the film, which i believe is a b̶o̶b̶ ̶j̶u̶s̶t̶m̶a̶n̶
matt jeffries prototype? is noted to have been hastily put on display, and was "based on a vulcan design" because presumably by 2005 we have canon references to vulcan ships containing rings in their designs, is that right?
- nice fleshing out of the "weird yellow eyed dude with disheveled hair" as i think of him in TMP, the guy who defends decker in the director's edition after kirk leaves the bridge and uhura replies with her bon mot (which i think is nichelle's best line performance in the entire film).
- i don't know what you would have called tavero in 2005. but in 2020 i call him an incel. tavero: "i.....am not one that any of the girls would pick, when they are free to choose." dovraku: "i see. such and unfair system, wouldn't you say? this 'freedom'—it makes things better for those who can take what they want, and worse for all the rest." if the prose were sloppy, blue, and with a few misspellings, that could be taken right from a redpill subreddit.
- 1.) was spring rain introduced in this book? 2.) does she appear elsewhere in the novelverse?
- i haven't read the lost years in a really long time. is this book compatible with mccoy's post-TOS visit with natira in that text? whether it is or not, is that visit acknowledged by
ex machina? retconned in any way?