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Star Trek: In The Name of Honor (#97) by Dayton Ward

Damian

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This was the final numbered novel published in 2002 that I just completed. I had never read it before, though I've had it for a while. It takes place a few months after TFF on the Enterprise-A so I was excited to read it, since so few books take place during that period. There is a prologue that takes place in 2279, a few years before TWOK. Basically Klingons ambush a Starfleet vessel, the Gagarin, and take some of it's crew prisoner. We see some familiar characters, including Lt. Garrovick from "Obsession", Koloth and Korax, both from "The Trouble with Tribbles" and Gorkon, obviously from TUC. Koloth is sent on a covert mission by Gorkon, a member of the High Council at the time, to elicit the help of Captain Kirk in rescuing the prisoners. Klingon society is in the early stages of adopting an honor code based on Kahless and the taking of prisoners is considered dishonorable. Koloth subscribes to this new philosophy, as do several other Klingons, but not all do, including Korax. In some ways it's your basic prison rescue story. However it's much more than that.

Ward tries to provide a transition between the Klingons as seen in the original series, who were much more belligerent and without a strict sense of honor (though seeds of it could be found in characters like Kor and Kang), and those we seen in TNG. It's the very beginning of the adoption of that sense of honor. There are growing pains of course. Also Ward brings up the Klingon's different appearances, including Koroth's change in physical appearance. Ward doesn't ignore the change, but he very creatively discusses it while at the same time leaving the reason ambiguous, in effect protecting his story from being overwritten by canon. Kirk even tries to get the reason out of Koloth, speculating on the causes (including bringing up the possibility of their being different species of Klingons--though that would not answer Koloth's change of appearance--and Koloth gives the same answer Worf did in DS9--that they don't discuss it). It was written before the Enterprise episodes that finally give the reasoning behind the change, and Ward's story still fits existing canon. I thought that was deftly handled.

Early in the story I thought Kirk's reaction to having to team up with Koloth was out of character for the time period. Kirk didn't seem as angry toward Klingons as he would be years later in TUC. But two things that the book did bring up. His experiences with General Korrd from TFF opens Kirk to the possibility of not all Klingons being alike. The 2nd is how the book ends. I won't spill the beans here, but the ending hardens Kirk's feelings towards Klingons that would continue until TUC.

So overall I thought it was an entertaining book, just shy of excellent. As a continuity junky I loved Ward's tying together the various changes of Klingons and Klingon society between the original series and TNG. I also liked how he ingeniously handled the changes in the appearance of the Klingons and in such a way to almost protect his work from later canon. And he also provides an additional explanation for why Kirk almost despised Klingons in TUC, that it was more than just his son's death.
 
“As far as I’m concerned, every last one of you can go to Gre‘thor, or Hell, or wherever it is that Klingons burn best. "

You're right about this being a pretty good book. My take away is that classic Klingons would commit barbaric acts for power and glory, while "modern" Klingons commit barbaric acts in the name of Kahless and honor. In the end, they are both bloodthirsty psychos. Kind of makes me think Valeris was on to something.

Spoilers

Korax really got screwed didn't he? The new, improved, and "redeemed" Koloth didn't seem to have any regrets about letting him take the fall for the tribble incident or seeing him take the wrap for the "dishonor" of being a prison commandant where Feds are being held. Korax was pretty humane by Klingon standards; if it wasn't for him, the prisoners would have been toast.
 
Yeah, i like the cover, too. Not only is the picture nice to look at it actually depicts a scene from the novel. Shocking, I know.

The thing that bothers me the most about so many Trek covers isn't that the the photoshopping is often crude, or that there is frequently a total lack of imagination involved in the design, it's that the publishers don't seem to care about doing better. They just take it for granted that their customers will buy anything with the Trek label on it.

This isn't something that you can just write off as a cost saving measure, imo. There have to be millions of people out there who have superior Photoshop skills. Even a novice could equal some of these efforts. I'm not saying I could do better. Frankly, I'm terrible at Photoshop. But it's because I am so terrible that it irritates me to see professional cover artists using the same crude shortcuts to overcome their shortcomings that I do. Having trouble with light and shadow? Screw it, everything's tinted blue now.

If I were a writer, I think I would be pretty disheartened if I spent months working on a book only to have some halfassed cover slapped on it.
 
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^ Although, as great as the cover is on its own terms, it's extremely misleading when it comes to the actual plot, since Kirk and company use a very different class of Klingon ship during the attack on the prison-camp, not a Bird-of-Prey. I'm guessing the cover-artist received a directive from the studio or the publisher to use a familiar onscreen Klingon ship in the piece, since the BoP would be very recognizable to most folks.
 
Possible spoilers

my memory is terrible, but was the ship that ultimately destroyed the camp a BoP?
 
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