Star Trek: New Frontier Explained

Star Trek: New Frontier
Author:Peter David
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Science fiction
Pub Date:1997–2015
Number Of Books:25

Star Trek: New Frontier is a series of interlinked novels written by Peter David, published by Simon & Schuster imprints, Pocket Books, Pocket Star, and Gallery Books, from 1997 to 2015. New Frontier was the first Star Trek tie-in fiction property not to be based on a television series. The series was created by John J. Ordover.[1]

The novels explore life aboard the, commanded by Capt. Mackenzie Calhoun. New Frontier is concurrent with The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager television series and their tie-in book lines.

Production

John J. Ordover said in Voyages of Imagination (2009), "One of the major problems with the novels at the time [the mid-nineties] … was you couldn't put any inherent continuity into them and you couldn’t make any significant changes, so characters couldn’t die, they couldn't change, they couldn't leave. The core characters always had to remain the same. After a few years, that gets frustrating for an editor." Ordover devised New Frontier to accomplish what he couldn't with the other Star Trek book lines—to create a serialized, internally consistent, series of novels set in the Star Trek universe. According to Peter David, "Paramount's belief was that there would be little to no interest from the fans in a [''Star Trek''] series that did not stem directly from the [television] shows." He was given "their blessing", with the caveat a number of characters from The Next Generation were to be included.

“Peter David made up MacKenzie Calhoun on his own," said Ordover. Likewise, David said, "I’m pretty sure John came up with the . He told me the characters he wanted to use and I was allowed to run with it." David then "fleshed out the concept and created the original characters."[2]

Four novels were published in paperback novella format in 1997, similar to the release of The Green Mile by Stephen King. An omnibus was published in 1998. The novels that followed were published in mass-market paperback format. No Limits (2003), an anthology of short stories edited by David, was published in trade paperback format.[3]

WildStorm published a graphic novel in 2000, written by David, with artists Mike Collins and David Roach. A five-issue comic book miniseries was published by IDW Publishing in 2008, also by David, with artist Stephen Thompson.

In total, twenty four novels, a short story anthology, and two graphic novels, have been published, in addition to several short stories, and related works, by other writers. Characters and settings from New Frontier have appeared appear in other Star Trek novels, most of which were written by David. Novels have been included in crossovers with other Star Trek book lines, such as: The Captain's Table (1998), Double Helix (1999) Gateways (2000), The Lost Era (2003), and the Mirror Universe (2007–2009) anthologies. A short story by David was anthologized in the Tales of the Dominion War (2004), edited by Keith DeCandido.

The Returned (2015), the most recent installment of the series, was published as a three-part ebook exclusive by Pocket Star.[4]

Premise

The once-powerful Thallonian Empire has collapsed following a popular uprising, destabilizing a vast region of space known as Sector 221-G. Starfleet has dispatched the, under the command of Captain Mackenzie Calhoun, to fly the flag, and offer aid to those affected by the political and economic instability of the region.[5]

Characters

See main article: article and List of Star Trek: New Frontier characters. The characters in New Frontier are an amalgam of characters from the Animated Series, The Next Generation, David's trilogy of young adult Starfleet Academy novels, and new characters created for the series. The series is written in an ensemble-cast style, similar to a television series. However, the primary characters are Calhoun, Commander Elizabeth Shelby, and Vulcan medical officer Dr. Selar.

Ships

New Frontier follows the crews of several Starfleet ships:

Reception

Katherine Trendacosta of io9 said New Frontier filled in "a gap in the [''Star Trek''] universe that you didn’t even realize was there. And it did it all while being fun and smartly written."[6] She said the character Calhoun is "so perfect he feels like a stealth parody of a Mary Sue." Dan Gunther, in his review of Cold Wars (2001), said "David has a solid handle on his characters."[7]

Alison Baumgartner of ScienceFiction.com described New Frontier as having "all the space adventuring" of The Next Generation and Original Series, "mixed with all the political intrigue of Deep Space Nine, making it the best of all possible Star Trek worlds."[8]

Novels

Key:
ed.
et al.
All novels published as paperback editions, except where indicated.

Numbered novels

Novels are inconsistently numbered among primary sources.

TitleDateISBN
1House of Cards
2Into the Void
3The Two-Front War
4End Game
5Martyr
6Fire on High
7The Quiet Place
8Dark Allies
9Requiem
10Renaissance
11Restoration
12Being HumanOctober 30, 2001

Original novels

Original and crossover novels written by Peter David.

TitleDateISBN
Once Burned
Cold Wars
Gods AboveSeptember 30, 2003
Stone and AnvilOctober 28, 2003
After the FallNovember 30, 2004
Missing in ActionFebruary 28, 2006
TreasonApril 14, 2009
Blind Man’s BluffApril 26, 2011
The Returned, Part 1 ◊July 6, 2015
The Returned, Part 2 ◊August 3, 2015
The Returned, Part 3 ◊September 7, 2015

Omnibus editions

Published by Simon & Schuster.

TitleDateISBN
New Frontier
The Captain's Table

Short fiction

Collections that include New Frontier short fiction. All written by Peter, except those collected in No Limits (2003).

WorkTitleEditor(s)DateISBN
"Death After Life"What Lay BeyondJohn J. Ordover
"Stone Cold Truths"Tales of the Dominion WarKeith DeCandido
"Pain Management"Tales from the Captain's Table

No Limits (2003)

Star Trek: New FrontierNo Limits (2003) collected stories written by popular Star Trek tie-in fiction writers and friends of Peter David. Each story is presented from the perspective of members of the Excalibur crew. "Making a Difference", by Mary Scott-Wiecek, is a retelling of the Battle of Wolf 359.

Mirror Universe (2007–2009)

Two collected works, written by David, set in the Mirror Universe.

WorkTitleAuthor(s)DateISBN
Cutting Ties (novella)Obsidian AlliancesKeith DeCandido, Peter David, and Sara ShawMarch 20, 2007
"Homecoming"Shards and ShadowsMarco Palmieri and Margaret Clark, eds.

Graphic novels

Double Time (2000)

Star Trek: New FrontierDouble Time (2000) is a single-issue, square bound, graphic novel published by WildStorm.[9] Written by Peter David, with artists Michael Collins and David Roach. The title does not appear on the cover or spine, only the Star Trek: New Frontier word mark.

Turnaround (2008)

Star Trek: New FrontierTurnaround is a five-issue miniseries written by Peter David, with artist Stephen Thompson. Published by IDW Publishing.

DateCollectionDateISBN
1Turnaround, Vol. 1
2
3
4
5

Related novels

Characters and settings from New Frontier appear in other Star Trek book lines:

TitleAuthor(s)DateISBN
Doors into ChaosRobert Greenberger
Demons of Air and DarknessKeith DeCandido
Catalyst of SorrowsMargaret Wander BonannoDecember 30, 2003

The Next Generation (1991–2007)

Star Trek: The Next Generation novels which include characters from New Frontier:

TitleAuthor(s)DateISBN
VendettaPeter David
Triangle: Imzadi II
Double or Nothing
Diplomatic ImplausibilityKeith DeCandido
Q & A
Before DishonorPeter David

Starfleet Academy (1993)

Star Trek: The Next GenerationStarfleet Academy young adult series explores the lives of the crew as Starfleet Academy cadets. Three novellas written by Peter David tie into New Frontier

Title ^DateISBN
1Worf's First Adventure
2Line of Fire
3Survival

Science Fiction Book Club

Omnibus editions published exclusively for the Science Fiction Book Club. New Frontier (1998) is very similar to the edition published by Pocket Books the following month. Prometheans (1998) is a book club exclusive.

Title †DateISBN
New Frontier
Prometheans

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ayers, Jeff. Voyages of the Imagination: The Star Trek Fiction Companion. Voyages of Imagination. 2006-11-14. Pocket Books. 9781416503491. New York.
  2. Web site: David. Peter. 2003-10-21. WHAT'CHA WANNA KNOW?. 2019-01-17. PeterDavid.net. en-US. Peter David.
  3. Web site: Title: No Limits. 2019-01-17. ISFDB.
  4. Web site: 2015-03-07. The Returned: Out This Summer. 2019-01-09. StarTrek.com.
  5. Book: David, Peter. Star Trek: New Frontier. 2002-02-21. Pocket Books/Star Trek. 9780743455770. New York. en. Peter David.
  6. Web site: The Star Trek: New Frontier Series Proves How Great Tie-In Books Can Be. Trendacosta. Katharine. 2016-05-04. io9. en-US. 2019-01-17.
  7. Web site: Cold Wars. Gunther. Dan. 2012-04-13. www.treklit.com. en. 2019-01-17.
  8. Web site: Should A New Star Trek Television Series Follow Peter David's Vision?. Baumgartner. Alison. 2013-01-11. ScienceFiction.com. en-US. 2019-01-17.
  9. Web site: Issue :: Star Trek: The New Frontier -- Double Time #1. 2019-09-26. Grand Comics Database. 2019-11-14.