Chapter By Chapter (usually) features me reading one chapter of the selected book at a time and reviewing it as if I were reviewing an episode of a TV show or an issue of a comic. There will be spoilers if you haven’t read to the point I have, and if you’ve read further I ask that you don’t spoil anything further into the book. Think of it as a read-along book club.

In case you missed the book reveal, we’re back to the prose novel, back to Star Trek, and back to characters we met during The Vulcan Academy Murders, with the same author. This is essentially a sequel to that book, but rather than a police procedural using the original Enterprise crew and exploring relationships between species in the Star Trek universe we’ve got a medical procedural using the original Enterprise crew and exploring relationships between species in the Star Trek universe.
IDIC: Infinite Diversity In Infinite Combination. As the culture war has kind of messed up what “diversity” means, it’s not a surprise that the guy who said his take on Star Trek wasn’t about making Star Trek but using it to send a message brought on people who doesn’t know what the word means in the Star Trek’s context. In the Star Trek universe the race war was ended when World War III and all the genetically augmented supermen happened. Diversity there was diversity of culture, diversity of thought, diversity of beliefs, all combining to create a shared intergalactic society. There are species who could never understand that, but humanity went through a lot of trouble to learn that, which might be why Earth was the home of the Federation.
This story takes place not on Earth, or Vulcan like Jean Lorrah’s last book, but on a space colony where peace and tolerance for all are the norm, since that’s what they need to survive. Except something is about to challenge that notion, and exploring how that affects everyone will hopefully be good Trek. The Vulcan Academy Murders already showed that she could write good Star Trek and explore cultural differences without hostility towards any one philosophy or group. It’s time to see if she can do it again, which we’ll learn by the end of this book. To get to the end, however, we must start at the beginning. So let’s get started.
Continue reading →
Tell others about the Spotlight: