• 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!

Spoilers TOS: The Latter Fire by James Swallow Review Thread

Rate The Latter Fire

  • Outstanding

    Votes: 11 32.4%
  • Above Average

    Votes: 17 50.0%
  • Average

    Votes: 6 17.6%
  • Below Average

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Poor

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    34
The one thing that really bothered me with this book was the cover art. This is one of those book so era it felt like the cover art was just a piece of generic Trek art (in this case the Enterprise warping past the planet), and yet many times in the book it is said that that is not how the area the Enterprise is in looks like. But really, the cover art I find is really generic and not story specific.
 
Yes 100 in and more interesting. I have some speculation between the object's drive and the increase in rate of wsrp drive development.
 
I quite enjoyed this one. A classic Trek story of people starting off as enemies, but overcoming their differences to come together in friendship. A fitting theme for a 50th anniversary tale.

I really liked the character of Kaleo. It's good to see Kirk being able to commiserate with a fellow captain, and see that, although they are from different worlds, their shared experiences bind them in a way that perhaps can't happen between a captain and their crew. (In that way, she actually reminded me a lot of Ael...) Add to that her first-season-Archer-like awe of the unknown, and her bravery with each new situation that was thrust upon her, and you have a very compelling guest character.

(Is it wrong that I kept visualizing the Syhaari as 1960s-era Planet of the Apes-type characters, even though the only two Planet of the Apes movies I've seen in their entirety were the Tim Burton version and the more recent Rise of the Planet of the Apes?)

Also nice to see a story featuring the TAS characters Arex and M'Ress. That doesn't seem to happen very often!

It was also great to get to see Uhura get so much to do in this novel. It actually seemed a bit odd to see her out-sciencing Spock at one point, but I think that's because we're so used to seeing Spock as "Super Science Officer!" that it seems unusual to see someone else come up with something that he didn't. But if it gives Uhura more opportunities to shine, then I'm all for it! :D

One thing that I thought was going to happen... in the scene with Zuur and her aide (ch'Sellor?), when they were going over the surveillance equipment, it kind of seemed more nefarious than just "this helps us with our diplomatic job", so I thought there was going to be some kind of reveal that They Weren't Who They Appeared to Be, but that never happened. It then seems a bit hypocritical of them to chastise Kirk for not following rules, while actively breaking them on their own.

All-in-all, an enjoyable read. Oh... and I really appreciated the Forbidden Planet reference! :)
 
Uhhh, I take it you never read The New Frontier books. M'Ress and Arex are major characters in the series from Cold Wars, the 14th book in the series on.
 
So would anyone who's had a chance to read this already let me in on what specifically were any connections to the rest of the Litverse in this novel? I know there are things hiding in there somewhere.
 
We were joined by James on Literary Treks this week!
1457633910218
 
I rather liked it.

I would say that more could have been made of Chekov's departure.

I would say that the Syhaari skill at replicating organic matter (particularly with feeding guests with their own replicated flesh) certainly constitutes a "Chekhov's Gun" that drove later developments.

seemed for much of the book like Mr. Swallow was telegraphing; it was a good surprise when we found out that no, the leviathan wasn't reacting to members of its own species being held captive, in a copy of the ending of Encounter at Farpoint, but was being driven (and eventually driven mad) by a people who had been wronged.
 
@ryan123450
Short answer - Between the novel 'That Which Divides' and the animated episode 'Beyond the Farthest Star' as it has Chekov returning to Earth to finish his training and Lt. Arex signing aboard as the new navigator. Much is made of the fact that Chekov has spent three years onboard the Enterprise.
Edit to add:
I'm glad I'm not the only one who pictured the aliens as looking similar to the makeup worn by the actors in the 'Planet of the Apes' movies.
 
Last edited:
@ryan123450
Short answer - Between the novel 'That Which Divides' and the animated episode 'Beyond the Farthest Star' as it has Chekov returning to Earth to finish his training and Lt. Arex signing aboard as the new navigator. Much is made of the fact that Chekov has spent three years onboard the Enterprise.

Ok great. That's exactly where I put it when I added it to my timeline this weekend.

A small detail, but there's a Syhaari crewmember on board the Titan in Sight Unseen...

Thanks for satisfying my curiosity!
 
I rated this book average - the characterization worked well (though I wouldn't expect anything less than top-notch work by Swallow here), the raised issues with ambition, racism, revenge, and overcoming all this to collaborate and compromise were interesting enough. But the plot itself was a bit too predictable for me to be kept on the edge of my seat.
 
I, too, was thinking Planet of the Apes, even though the closest I've gotten to anything in that franchise was the beach scene at the end of Spaceballs ("Dear me. What are those things coming out of her nose?" "Spaceballs!" "Oh, shit, there goes the planet!").

I also thought of the whole bit about Neanderthals ("the real Humans") being hyperintelligent, hypercivilized, and gentle to a fault, from ADF's Glory Lane.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top