Star Trek: The Motion Picture (novel)
Author | Gene Roddenberry |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Star Trek: The Original Series |
Genre | Science fiction novel |
Publisher | Pocket Books |
Publication date | December 1979 |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Pages | 252 pp |
ISBN | 0-671-83088-0 (first edition, paperback) |
OCLC | 5723607 |
Preceded by | None |
Followed by | The Entropy Effect |
The novelization of the film Star Trek: The Motion Picture was written in 1979 by Gene Roddenberry. It is notable as being the only Star Trek novel to be written by Roddenberry, who created the franchise. It was also the first Star Trek novel published by Pocket Books, beginning a prolific relationship with the franchise that continues as of 2012. At the time the book was published, however, Bantam Books held the rights to publish original Star Trek-based fiction; Pocket Books wouldn't publish its first original Trek novel until 1981.
This book is sometimes erroneously credited to Alan Dean Foster. However, he only contributed to the film's story; the novelization was written solely by Roddenberry.
Plot summary
The original historic 5-year mission is over. All of the Enterprise's original crew have pursued other jobs, only to be called back into action. The USS Enterprise has been refitted and the original crew must deal with an incredibly destructive power that threatens the Earth and the human race.
Primary differences between the film and the novel
Due to series creator Gene Roddenberry having authored the novelization to the motion picture, the material of the novelization is some of the most would-be official canon since the cancellation of the original series itself.
Admiral James Kirk (whose middle name is Tiberius, for reason of that cæsar having fascinated Kirk's grandfather, Samuel), while at the Egypt-Israeli Museum at Alexandria receives an emergency call via a secretive (there is a footnote of the Mind Control Revolts of 2043–47, against implants) head-implant tranceiver, where he sees the Klingon's new D7 (K't'inga-class) battle cruisers being attacked.
Spock, after the five-year mission, has returned to his homeworld of Vulcan and is undergoing the Kolinahr discipline under the Vulcan Masters on the high plateau of Gol, the planet's most sacred site. Spock decides to purge his memories of the human race's existence in what he has considered the former mission to be mistake against his own Vulcan-race mastery. As Master T'sai begins to perform her mind-meld with him, his thoughts are struck at having been scanned by a consciousness, and reacted with fear for the planet Earth and its inhabitants. While no association to moons are made, the plural term, suns rising, is mentioned.
Kirk transfers to the Mediterranean Alliance's mid-21st-century-constructed hydroelectric dam, which has reclaimed the Med Basin, and speaks via 'holocom' to his former year-long spouse, Starfleet flag officer Vice Admiral Lori Ciana (also revealed to be the second of the two victims in the transporter accident, along with Commander Sonak. She was played by Susan Sullivan in the film).[1] Ciana, having informed the Admiral that Commanding Admiral Heihachiro Nogura in a pending emergency was assembling as many of Kirk's former crew as possible to report to the Enterprise, the only starship in range, now in dry-dock for the past three years, having completed its five-year mission. Shocked that Heihachiro would use his former spouse to attempt to placate him with this news, Kirk takes the tube from Gibraltar to Los Angeles Island, where he catches the first northbound airtram for a twenty-minute flight to the San Francisco headquarters (some detailed actual quotes are revealed from the 12 minute conversation).
The orbital Centroplex is where Kirk took command of the Enterprise nearly nine years earlier, and is also the largest tender facility this side of Antares. Sulu and Uhura (a Bantu of Swahili culture) have each become a lieutenant commander, Chekov, who has recently returned from weapons-defence command school, is now a full lieutenant, while Chapel is a M.D. Dr. Leonard McCoy had become reclusive over the three-year hiatus researching applications of Fabrini medicine on earth. Starfleet had provided Daystrom equipment which uses Fabrini symbols.
For an adaption of a G-rated science fiction film, there is actually a large amount of sexual content in the novel. The Deltan race are revealed to be a race that's sexually irresistible (Ilia shaved her head to be less appealing.) Decker actually has sex with the Ilia probe in an attempt to join minds and connect with this alien intruder.
Throughout the novel, a possible "canon-spelling" for "V'Ger" as Vejur is consistently used by Roddenberry, which starts when the "Ilia-Probe" is asked by Captain Kirk about the origin of "her" programming.[2]
References
- ↑ http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Lori_Ciana
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (1979). Star Trek: The Motion Picture. New York, NY: Pocket Books. p. 179. ISBN 0-671-83088-0.