Book Review | Star Trek: Typhon Pact - Rough Beasts of Empire by David R George III

The third Star Trek: Typhon Pact novel is ostensibly the most alluring of them all, largely due to the promise of its cover, which juxtaposes a surprisingly-clean-shaven and short-haired Benjamin Sisko with an elderly Spock who can’t be far off his silver screen date with a genocidal, time-travelling Romulan. Such a conjunction is not only unique but will be instantly appealing to most readers of the range, which is more than could be said of another heavy political novel grounded on Romulus, which is what this book’s innards actually provide. This makes David R George III’s novel a very difficult one to consider objectively, as it’s almost impossible to look past one’s disappointment at the dearth of any meaningful Spock / Sisko interaction, and, to a lesser extent, the missed opportunity to examine one of the coalition’s lesser-known cultures, such as the lightly-touched-upon Tzenkethi.

The green-blooded Star Trek legend carries the political aspects of the book dexterously, as an attempt on his life prompts him to opportunistically reconsider his strategy towards reunifying Vulcan and Romulus. Between the events of The Next Generation’s “Unification” episodes and the start of this novel, Spock has done little more continue to preach from the shadows. Here, however, he elects to capitalise upon the recent divide of the Romulan people into two discrete states by manipulating the Star Empire’s praetor into legalising his reunification movement, the idea being that it would serve her ends to reunify the Romulan people, as Romulus couldn’t hope to reunify with Vulcan until it is itself whole again. As events play out, the move reveals a hard edge to the Vulcan that you’ll be hard-pressed to find outside a J J Abrams film, which personally I find fascinating.


Published on September 03, 2013 05:39
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