My review of this book.
http://startreklitverse.yolasite.com/book-reviews.php
Spoilers in the full review but here is the redacted version.
Another in the line of ebook novellas, several of which have been The Original Series movie era tales, this story is set in the days following Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Because of my love for books set in the movie era, I wanted to like this story, and I had high hopes that would, until a few chapters in when I just couldn't deny that what I was reading was, sadly just not very good.
The book was essentially a character piece about Kirk, Spock, and Sulu. Each had their own stories which were totally unrelated to each other, apart from the fact that they all took place during the Enterprise's repairs at Earth following it's encounter with V'Ger. None of the stories were very action driven, instead going for a deeply personal look at the three characters. I was ok will the idea of all of this, but the execution contained many problems.
Spock's story was my favorite. But Spock's actions early in the book are too cold, even for him. His reunion with Sarek seems out of character for his father, and the resolution of his journey seems ubsurd. I was most struck at the beginning of Spock's story by the narrator claiming that Spock and McCoy were essentially the same: "material so similar that the differences were only apparent upon closer scrutiny." This doesn't ring true to me at all.
Kirk's tale was a mixed bag. I enjoyed the back story about Sam Kirk and the brothers life growing up in Iowa, but the present day portion was cliche and boring to me.
Sulu's story really threw me for a loop. The entire book isn't in continuity with the Lit-verse, and actually doesn't seem to be in continuity with the ending of The Motion Picture (in which Kirk takes the ship "out there, thataway" in search of new adventures, not back to Earth for more refitting). But bits and pieces of the Lit-verse are retained in contradictory ways. Spock's story seems to be building toward the new emotional state that we find him in in Christopher L. Bennett's post-TMP tales, a state which isn't really featured in any older Trek novels. But the entire setting of the novella is in contradiction to
Ex Machina which takes place in the same time period. Demora Sulu's mother's name from
The Captain's Daughter is retained in
Shadows of the Machine, but she is a vastly different character, and her relationship with Sulu is in total contradiction to that older story. Why keep the name but make the character someone different entirely?
The ending of the Sulu story really bothered me. To me it makes Sulu out to be a horribly big cad.
I feel like these stories, reworked, could have been great B-plots to a bigger, more traditionally "Star Trek" A-plot, which would have had to have revolved around Scotty, Chekov, or Uhura. But taken as they are,
Shadow of the Machine is one of the least impressive Star Trek tales I've read.
I'd give this story two out of five stars. I hope that future installments in the ebook line are better, because they have been very hit and miss lately.