Star Trek Voyager Mosaic presents the excellent tapestry of Janeway
Captain Kathryn Janeway survived massive odds and got her crew and ship home from being lost in space.
It was an excellent feat, requiring her to draw on all of her life experiences to do so.
All of this is chronicled in Star Trek Voyager Mosaic, written by show producer Jeri Taylor. She is a veteran writer and producer who worked for quite some time on different Star Trek shows and co-created Voyager. While writing Mosaic, which was published as a hardcover in 1996, she was asked to do the followup book Pathways. Taylor really knows and understands Janeway, and both those books are the only Star Trek novels considered cannon by the producers. And they got Katherine Mulgrew, the actress who plays Janeway to perform the audio book.
Star Trek, for the non cool, is a television and movie franchise, started in the 1960s by the late Gene Roddenberry, where humanity goes out to explore the unknown. Start Trek Voyager, the fifth spinoff, was like Lost In Space, where the ship is stranded seventy plus years from Earth and trying to get home.
Mosaic takes place towards the start of the series with Voyager investigating a strange planet when the brutal Kazon attack. Janeway has to retreat and rethink and regroup in order to save the day. At this point the narrative splits three ways, with Vulcan Turok working to keep hidden from the Kazon and figure out the planets secrets, Janeway on Voyager assessing the situation and having vivid dreams, and a huge chunk of the story with large flashbacks to Janeway’s life story.
Now we know that Janeway will save her people and solve the mystery, but Mosaic shows how her life in many best destiny ways led up to this moment. What we are here for, and Taylor knows this, is the who of Janeway.
We start with Kathryn Janeway as a child with her father Admiral Janeway, impressing him with her accomplishments. As the years go by, she leads herself more and more into Starfleet, and shows her responsible and rebellious sides. We also see her taking command of a situation, which in typical Star Trek fashion, is not what it seems to be. One interesting choice is with Janeway’s first serious boyfriend, who is clearly emotionally abusive, and how she figures this out and moves on. Unfortunately, this is still an issue in the future, but people recover better. Mosaic also shows her academy days, first assignments, becoming Captain, meeting her moral compass Tuvok, and how she and Mark started. Along the way Janeway bumps into several guest stars, and thankfully they all make sense.
Taylor really digs into what drives Janeway, and it is not simply to impress her esteemed father, but to live her potential of discovery and altruism. To do this, she does occasionally put herself in dangerous predicaments, but as another famous Captain stated, risk is our business.
One of the big cruxes of the novel involves the final memory Janeway deals with, and the implications of it. At this point, Taylor gets into PTSD and how to learn and adapt so that history becomes teacher. It is not easy, which is part of the issue, but something that has to be done in order to move forward.
Thankfully, this is not the defining moment of Janeway’s life, but it is a big moment amoungst all sorts of big moments. This book is a tapestry of this concept, and If you are a Janeway fan, then Mosaic is a must read.
Scoopriches