Difference between revisions of "Star Trek 5 (Novel)"

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Story by [[Lee Erwin]] and [[Jerry Sohl]]<br/>
 
Story by [[Lee Erwin]] and [[Jerry Sohl]]<br/>
 
Teleplay by [[Lee Erwin]]
 
Teleplay by [[Lee Erwin]]
 +
 +
{{link|FASA|Star Fleet Captain||Captain}} {{link|FASA|James T. Kirk||Kirk}} takes the {{link|FASA|U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701||''Enterprise''}} to {{link|FASA|Elba II}}, home of an asylum for the {{link|FASA|United Federation of Planets||Federation}}'s criminally insane. He has brought a new {{link|FASA|medication||drug}} that, when used in conjunction with other treatments, can cure these individuals. {{link|FASA|transporter||Beaming}} down, Kirk and {{link|FASA|Spock}} are met by the colony's {{link|FASA|governor}}, {{link|FASA|Donald Cory}} &mdash; who turns out to be {{link|FASA|Garth of Izar}}, a brilliant, former starship {{link|FASA|commanding officer||captain}}. Now an inmate of Elba II, Garth used his mysterious {{link|FASA|cellular metamorphosis||shape-changing}} power to assume Cory's appearance. Imprisoning the real governor, Garth then freed his fellow inmates and took over the asylum.
 +
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Now he seeks to gain possession of the ''Enterprise.'' His attempts, involving impersonation and the wiles of the {{link|FASA|Orions||Orion}} inmate {{link|FASA|Marta}}, are unsuccessful. In a rage, Garth has Marta dragged into the poisonous atmosphere beyond the asylum's protective dome and killed with a powerful {{link|FASA|explosives||explosive}} he invented. Mr. {{link|FASA|Montgomery Scott||Scott}}, left in command of the ''Enterprise,'' cannot penetrate the asylum's {{link|FASA|forcefield}} to aid Kirk. But Spock manages to escape his guards &mdash; only to discover that Garth has transformed into Kirk's double. The {{link|FASA|Vulcans||Vulcan}} correctly deduces which is the impostor, and after control of the asylum is restored to Cory, Garth is treated with the new drug and on his way to recovery.
 
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Adapted from the episode ''[[The Tholian Web (Episode)|The Tholian Web]].''<br/>
 
Adapted from the episode ''[[The Tholian Web (Episode)|The Tholian Web]].''<br/>
 
Written by [[Judy Burns]] and [[Chet Richards]].
 
Written by [[Judy Burns]] and [[Chet Richards]].
 +
 +
The {{link|FASA|U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701||''Enterprise''}} discovers another {{link|FASA|United Federation of Planets||Federation}} starship, the {{link|FASA|U.S.S. Defiant NCC-1764||U.S.S. ''Defiant,''}} adrift in an unexplored region of space. Beaming aboard in {{link|FASA|spacesuits}}, {{link|FASA|Star Fleet Captain||Captain}} {{link|FASA|James T. Kirk||Kirk}}, {{link|FASA|Spock}}, {{link|FASA|Leonard McCoy||McCoy}}, and {{link|FASA|Pavel Chekov||Chekov}} find the ''Defiant's'' entire crew dead: the victims of violence. The ship is rapidly shifting into a parallel dimension and becoming "nonexistent" in this one. The landing party returns to the ''Enterprise'' &mdash; except for Kirk, who is stranded aboard the ''Defiant'' when it vanishes. Spock is able to calculate when and where the ghost ship will rematerialize, and at that time, the ''Enterprise'' will be able to rescue Kirk, if his {{link|FASA|oxygen}} supply lasts.
 +
 +
The wait proves hazardous. This region of space, due to its peculiar physical properties, renders the ship's crew hostile to one another. Then the {{link|FASA|Tholians}} enter the scene and accuse the ''Enterprise'' of trespassing in their space, and weave an energized "{{link|FASA|Tholian web||
 +
web}}" around the ''Enterprise.'' The expected "{{link|FASA|interphase}}" between universes occurs, but the ''Defiant'' fails to rematerialize, and when Kirk is presumed dead, the crew's morale begins to deteriorate even further. Then several crew members, and ultimately the entire {{link|FASA|bridge}} crew, see the captain's ghostly figure appear before them. Kirk is alive, Spock realizes, and there is still a chance to save him. The ''Enterprise'' manages to flee the Tholian web, taking Kirk's disembodied form along with the ship. The captain is finally beamed aboard, his suit's oxygen supply nearly exhausted.
 
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==Let That Be Your Last Battlefield==
 
==Let That Be Your Last Battlefield==
 
{{MyriadLetThatBeYourLastBattlefield}}
 
{{MyriadLetThatBeYourLastBattlefield}}
Adapted from the episode ''[[Let That Be Your Last Battlefield (Episode)|Let That Be Your Last Battlefield]],'' written by [[NAME]].
+
Adapted from the episode ''[[Let That Be Your Last Battlefield (Episode)|Let That Be Your Last Battlefield]].''<br/>
 +
Story by [[Lee Cronin]].<br/>
 +
Teleplay by [[Oliver Crawford]].
  
 +
On an urgent rescue mission, the {{link|FASA|U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701||''Enterprise''}} intercepts a stolen {{link|FASA|United Federation of Planets||Federation}} {{link|FASA|Class F shuttlecraft||shuttlecraft}} and its thief, a {{link|FASA|humanoids||humanoid}} named {{link|FASA|Lokai}}, who asks for asylum. Lokai, a native of the planet {{link|FASA|Cheron}}, is half-white and half-black. Soon after his arrival, the ''Enterprise'' discovers another ship following them at incredible speed. Locking on that craft's passenger, the ''Enterprise'' {{link|FASA|transporter||transports}} him aboard just as his ship explodes. The passenger is {{link|FASA|Bele}}, another {{link|FASA|Cheronians||Cheronian}}, who is also half-black and half-white, though oppositely-colored from Lokai. He claims to be Cheron's chief officer attached to the commission of political traitors, in pursuit of Lokai. {{link|FASA|Star Fleet Ranks||Captain}} {{link|FASA|James T. Kirk||Kirk}} resists his undiplomatic {{link|FASA|extradition}} attempts, and after the near destruction of the ''Enterprise,'' the starship arrives at Cheron to discover a dead world: the inhabitants have all killed one another with their insistent hatreds. Bele and Lokai chase one another down to their dead planet, where they continue their senseless fight.
 
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==This Side of Paradise==
 
==This Side of Paradise==
 
{{MyriadThisSideofParadise}}
 
{{MyriadThisSideofParadise}}
Adapted from the episode ''[[This Side of Paradise (Episode)|This Side of Paradise]],'' written by [[NAME]].
+
Adapted from the episode ''[[This Side of Paradise (Episode)|This Side of Paradise]].''<br/>
 +
Story by [[Nathan Butler]] and [[D.C. Fontana]].<br/>
 +
Teleplay by [[D.C. Fontana]].
  
 +
The ''{{link|FASA|U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701||Enterprise}}'' arrives at planet {{link|FASA|Omicron Ceti III}}, where {{link|FASA|James T. Kirk||Kirk}} expects to find all the colonists dead because of the deadly {{link|FASA|Berthold radiation||Berthold rays}} to which they have been exposed for three years. But when a landing party beams down, colony leader {{link|FASA|Elias Sandoval}} informs them that everyone on the planet is quite well&mdash;including {{link|FASA|Leila Kalomi}}, a young botanist with whom {{link|FASA|Spock}} had worked six years before. Leila leads Spock to a clump of plants that spray him with their spores, liberating the {{link|FASA|Vulcans||Vulcan}}'s emotions. Spock expresses his long-suppressed love for Leila. Other members of the landing party are exposed, plants are beamed up to the ''Enterprise,'' and before long everyone is affected. Then the captain discovers that strong emotional reactions are the antidote to the spores' effects, and tricks Spock into coming back aboard the ''Enterprise.'' He goads him into a fight, and barely avoids being killed by the Vulcan's superior strength. The conflict restores Spock to normal, and he assists Kirk in constructing an apparatus that frees the ''Enterprise'' crew and the colonists from the spores.
 
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Revision as of 01:15, 22 November 2023

Star Trek 5
Cover (Blish05)

Cover (Blish05)
Series Star Trek
Published by Bantam Books
Previous Star Trek 4 (Blish04)
Next Star Trek 6 (Blish06)
Written by James Blish
Released Feb 1972
Advertising
FASA Timeline
(FASA Roleplaying Game)


More Thrilling Adventures from the Prize-Winning Television Series Created by Gene Roddenberry

The Enterprise blazes new star trails to danger as Kirk, Spock and the rest encounter

  • an asylum planet where the mad rule
  • a universe with a total population of one
  • race warfare to the death—whiteblack against blackwhite
  • paradise—with a most unusual serpent
  • the ultimate in women's lib
  • an almost eternal triangle
  • a gang of galactic drop-outs

and other startling problems and perils.

The entire crew was deserting, hurrying down to the planet that had been declared deadly to human life.

Uhura had short-circuited all communications to Star Fleet Command. McCoy was getting blissfully drunk on mint juleps.

And Spock… Spock had fallen passionately in love!

Just one of the exciting stories included in this new collection, adapted from the award-winning TV series by James Blish, himself a Hugo Award winner and one of today's outstanding science fiction writers.

Whom Gods Destroy

Myriad Universes: "Whom Gods Destroy"

Adapted from the episode Whom Gods Destroy.
Story by Lee Erwin and Jerry Sohl
Teleplay by Lee Erwin

Captain Kirk takes the Enterprise to Elba II, home of an asylum for the Federation's criminally insane. He has brought a new drug that, when used in conjunction with other treatments, can cure these individuals. Beaming down, Kirk and Spock are met by the colony's governor, Donald Cory — who turns out to be Garth of Izar, a brilliant, former starship captain. Now an inmate of Elba II, Garth used his mysterious shape-changing power to assume Cory's appearance. Imprisoning the real governor, Garth then freed his fellow inmates and took over the asylum.

Now he seeks to gain possession of the Enterprise. His attempts, involving impersonation and the wiles of the Orion inmate Marta, are unsuccessful. In a rage, Garth has Marta dragged into the poisonous atmosphere beyond the asylum's protective dome and killed with a powerful explosive he invented. Mr. Scott, left in command of the Enterprise, cannot penetrate the asylum's forcefield to aid Kirk. But Spock manages to escape his guards — only to discover that Garth has transformed into Kirk's double. The Vulcan correctly deduces which is the impostor, and after control of the asylum is restored to Cory, Garth is treated with the new drug and on his way to recovery.

Related Data


The Tholian Web

Myriad Universes: "The Tholian Web"

Adapted from the episode The Tholian Web.
Written by Judy Burns and Chet Richards.

The Enterprise discovers another Federation starship, the U.S.S. Defiant, adrift in an unexplored region of space. Beaming aboard in spacesuits, Captain Kirk, Spock, McCoy, and Chekov find the Defiant's entire crew dead: the victims of violence. The ship is rapidly shifting into a parallel dimension and becoming "nonexistent" in this one. The landing party returns to the Enterprise — except for Kirk, who is stranded aboard the Defiant when it vanishes. Spock is able to calculate when and where the ghost ship will rematerialize, and at that time, the Enterprise will be able to rescue Kirk, if his oxygen supply lasts.

The wait proves hazardous. This region of space, due to its peculiar physical properties, renders the ship's crew hostile to one another. Then the Tholians enter the scene and accuse the Enterprise of trespassing in their space, and weave an energized "web" around the Enterprise. The expected "interphase" between universes occurs, but the Defiant fails to rematerialize, and when Kirk is presumed dead, the crew's morale begins to deteriorate even further. Then several crew members, and ultimately the entire bridge crew, see the captain's ghostly figure appear before them. Kirk is alive, Spock realizes, and there is still a chance to save him. The Enterprise manages to flee the Tholian web, taking Kirk's disembodied form along with the ship. The captain is finally beamed aboard, his suit's oxygen supply nearly exhausted.

Related Data


Let That Be Your Last Battlefield

Myriad Universes: "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield"

Adapted from the episode Let That Be Your Last Battlefield.
Story by Lee Cronin.
Teleplay by Oliver Crawford.

On an urgent rescue mission, the Enterprise intercepts a stolen Federation shuttlecraft and its thief, a humanoid named Lokai, who asks for asylum. Lokai, a native of the planet Cheron, is half-white and half-black. Soon after his arrival, the Enterprise discovers another ship following them at incredible speed. Locking on that craft's passenger, the Enterprise transports him aboard just as his ship explodes. The passenger is Bele, another Cheronian, who is also half-black and half-white, though oppositely-colored from Lokai. He claims to be Cheron's chief officer attached to the commission of political traitors, in pursuit of Lokai. Captain Kirk resists his undiplomatic extradition attempts, and after the near destruction of the Enterprise, the starship arrives at Cheron to discover a dead world: the inhabitants have all killed one another with their insistent hatreds. Bele and Lokai chase one another down to their dead planet, where they continue their senseless fight.

Related Data

This Side of Paradise

Myriad Universes: "This Side of Paradise"

Adapted from the episode This Side of Paradise.
Story by Nathan Butler and D.C. Fontana.
Teleplay by D.C. Fontana.

The Enterprise arrives at planet Omicron Ceti III, where Kirk expects to find all the colonists dead because of the deadly Berthold rays to which they have been exposed for three years. But when a landing party beams down, colony leader Elias Sandoval informs them that everyone on the planet is quite well—including Leila Kalomi, a young botanist with whom Spock had worked six years before. Leila leads Spock to a clump of plants that spray him with their spores, liberating the Vulcan's emotions. Spock expresses his long-suppressed love for Leila. Other members of the landing party are exposed, plants are beamed up to the Enterprise, and before long everyone is affected. Then the captain discovers that strong emotional reactions are the antidote to the spores' effects, and tricks Spock into coming back aboard the Enterprise. He goads him into a fight, and barely avoids being killed by the Vulcan's superior strength. The conflict restores Spock to normal, and he assists Kirk in constructing an apparatus that frees the Enterprise crew and the colonists from the spores.

Related Data

Turnabout Intruder

Myriad Universes: "Turnabout Intruder"

Adapted from the episode Turnabout Intruder, written by NAME.

Related Data

Requiem for Methuselah

Myriad Universes: "Requiem for Methuselah"

Adapted from the episode Requiem for Methuselah, written by NAME.

Related Data

The Way to Eden

Myriad Universes: "The Way to Eden"

Adapted from the episode The Way to Eden, written by NAME.

Related Data