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== Background Information ==
 
== Background Information ==
*This book was written before ''[[Star Trek: First Contact]]'' was ever conceived, and much of the future history it laid out was seemingly invalidated by that movie, although ''Federation'''s events '''could''' work with those of the film, assuming that a few of the novel's 21st century-era dates are realigned with those in ''First Contact''.
+
* This book was written before {{film|8}} was ever conceived, and much of the future history it laid out was seemingly invalidated by that movie, although ''Federation'''s events '''could''' work with those of the film, assuming that a few of the novel's 21st century-era dates are realigned with those in ''First Contact''.
 
* The novel was one of four to be re-released with an updated cover in late {{y|2006}} to honor ''Star Trek''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s [[Anniversary#2006 (40th)|40th anniversary]].
 
*The novel was one of four to be re-released with an updated cover in late [[2006]] to honor ''Star Trek''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s [[anniversary#2006 (40th)|40th anniversary]].
 
   
 
== Characters ==
 
== Characters ==

Revision as of 19:21, 24 March 2007

Original cover image
Authors: Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens
Publisher: Pocket Books
Series: TOS, TNG
Published: 1 October 1995
Pages: 467
Year: 2061, 2078, 2267, 2366
Stardate: 3856, 43922.1
Reference #: ISBN 0671894226 (hardcover)

ISBN 0671894234 (paperback)
ISBN 0671856766 (audio CD)

2006 cover image

In the mid-21st century, Zefram Cochrane's invention of the "fluctuation superimpellor" – later called "warp drive" – changed the course of history. But Earth was hardly in rosy times – the Optimum Movement, a new breed of Nazis, were on the rise, and war was brewing back home. Though the Optimum was destroyed in World War III, traces of it lived on, evading death itself and pursuing Cochrane across time.

Summary

From the back cover:

At last! The long awaited novel featuring both famous crews of the Starships Enterprise in an epic adventure that spans time and space.
Captain Kirk and the crew of the USS Enterprise NCC-1701 are faced with their most challenging mission yet—rescuing renowned scientist Zefram Cochrane from captors who want to use his skills to conquer the galaxy.
Meanwhile, ninety-nine years in the future on the USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D, Picard must rescue an important and mysterious person whose safety is vital to the survival of the Federation.
As the two crews struggle to fulfill their missions, destiny draws them closer together until past and future merge—and the fate of each of the two legendary starships rests in the hands of the other vessel...

The book begins with an aged James Kirk, ready to retire from Starfleet, visiting the Guardian of Forever one last time. The Guardian has been inactive since a few years after he discovered it, (TOS: "The City on the Edge of Forever") and a researcher there requests that he ask it a question. He does, and it doesn't respond. But when the researcher walks away, leaving Kirk alone with his regrets, he whispers the word "Why?", and the Guardian answers.

Zefram Cochrane has just returned from his historic first warp flight – to Alpha Centauri and back in just eight months. His friend and patron Micah Brack warns him that the Optimum – a militaristic political movement bent on the eradication of any person deemed genetically and/or ideologically "inferior" – has taken an interest in his work, and that a high-level officer, Colonel Adrik Thorsen, will arrive in a few hours. Brack explains that he's about to release the warp research he funded, royalty-free, because he believes the Optimum's rise will result in a bloody, planet-levelling war, and he wants extrasolar colonies established well before then. He arranges for Cochrane to be taken to a secret lab where he can continue his research outside the Optimum's grasp.

Nearly twenty years later, Cochrane returns to Earth. The Optimum has taken power across most of the civilized world, suspending the Constitution in the United States, imprisoning the British royalty, and everywhere making sure to "contain" nonoptimals. Thorsen captures Cochrane and demands that he explain how to build a "warp bomb."

During early research on the warp drive, an accident caused an antimatter explosion. Everything within eighteen meters of the equipment disappeared without even a trace of radiation. The diameter was determined by the laws of physics and couldn't be changed – but Thorsen refuses to believe that.

Cochrane eventually escapes, nearly killing Thorsen in the process – making him suboptimal. With prosthetic enhancements, Thorsen survives World War III and comes after Cochrane in his old age, killing the scientist's wife. Cochrane flees his home in the Alpha Centauri system and disappears.

This article or section is incompleteThis page is marked as lacking essential detail, and needs attention. Information regarding expansion requirements may be found on the article's talk page. Feel free to edit this page to assist with this expansion.

Memorable Quotes

"How surprising. I thought he would be the stiff-upper-lip type. 'So sorry to bleed on your carpet.' That sort of thing."

- Colonel Adrik Thorsen


"Ramming speed!"

- Jean-Luc Picard


"Though we have drawn on established Star Trek lore for many of the events in this book, we must add that much of the early history of the Federation, and Cochrane's adventures prior to and after inventing the warp drive, are extrapolations solely of our own creation and thus could be superseded by official adventures in the years to come."

- the authors, in their "Acknowledgements" section

Background Information

  • This book was written before Star Trek: First Contact was ever conceived, and much of the future history it laid out was seemingly invalidated by that movie, although Federation's events could work with those of the film, assuming that a few of the novel's 21st century-era dates are realigned with those in First Contact.
  • The novel was one of four to be re-released with an updated cover in late 2006 to honor Star Trek's 40th anniversary.

Characters

Canon characters listed below are linked to the main article about them. Non-canon characters are not linked, but those that recurred, appearing or being mentioned in more than one story, are defined further in Pocket TOS characters.. The story contains many Pocket TNG characters.

Regular and recurring characters

Zefram Cochrane
James T. Kirk
Spock
Jean-Luc Picard

Other characters

Adrik Thorsen

References

Grigari
Starfleet insignia
One memorable scene (pages 137 - 139 in the paperback edition) has a captive Cochrane explaining to villain Adrik Thorsen the principle behind warp drive. He starts by drawing a star and explaining that the line bisecting it represents light speed. He then draws a high, symmetrical curve, saying that it represents the infinite power needed to reach warp speeds under general relativity. Then he draws a much lower, asymmetric curve, with its peak after the imaginary light-speed line, stating that it represents the power usage of warp drive. The resulting graph strongly resembles the Starfleet Emblem, especially as seen in TOS; later in the book, Captain Picard refers to the symbol as the "Cochrane delta".