Star Trek: The Motion Picture (novel) explained

Star Trek: The Motion Picture
Author:Gene Roddenberry
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Science fiction
Publisher:Pocket Books
Release Date:December 1979
Media Type:Print (Hardback)
Pages:252 pp
Isbn:0-671-25324-7
Isbn Note:(hb.) (pb.)
Oclc:5751478
Followed By:The Entropy Effect
Congress:PS3568.O3424 S7 1979
Dewey:813/.5/4

Star Trek: The Motion Picture. A Novel is a 1979 novelization of the film , which was released in the same year. It is especially notable for being the only Star Trek novel to be written by Gene Roddenberry, who created the franchise. The book was also the first Star Trek novel published by Pocket Books.

Publishing history

The novelization of Star Trek: The Motion Picture was the first Star Trek novel published by Pocket Books,[1] beginning a prolific relationship with the franchise that continues as of 2024. At the time the book was published, however, Bantam Books held the rights to publish original Star Trek-based fiction; Pocket Books wouldn't publish its first original Trek novel until 1981.

A decade later, Pocket Books would be releasing one or more new Star Trek novels every month, with the cumulative books being called "by far the biggest series of fiction in the history of western literature."[2]

Authorship

This novel is sometimes erroneously credited to Alan Dean Foster, likely due to his having ghostwritten the Star Wars novelization for George Lucas, but Foster only contributed to the film's story. The novelization was written solely by Roddenberry.[3] [4] However, Roddenberry adapted the novel from the movie screenplay originally written by Harold Livingston, which greatly irritated the screenwriter.[5] Roddenberry received a $400,000 advance for the novel.[5]

Plot summary

The original historic 5-year mission is over. All of the Enterprises original crew have pursued other jobs, only to be called back into action. The USS Enterprise has been refitted and the original crew must deal with an incredibly destructive power that threatens the Earth and the human race.

Critical reception

In a humorous review in Tor.com, Ellen Cheeseman-Meyer described the novel as "a cross between an encyclopedia and a roller coaster" while also noting the book's "interesting sexual revelations about the Kirk family."[6] A review by Kevin Church echoes some of these points, such as how Captain Kirk's first name is a tribute to his mother's "love instructor".[4] Church concludes by saying the novel "is a bizarre artifact that's fascinating on its own to a certain sort of fan" but is "not worth the time for anyone who’s not interested in poking around the weird edges of the Star Trek mythos."[4]

Notes and References

  1. "Star Trek: Celebrating 35 Years" by Karen Raugust, Publishers Weekly, August 23, 2001.
  2. "Spaced out: The Star Trek Literary Phenomenon: Where No TV Series Has Gone Before" by Michael Epstein, Television Quarterly, volume 28, issue 1. 1996, pages 47-48.
  3. Book: Ellison, Harlan. Harlan Ellison's Watching: Stories. 10 March 2015. Open Road Media. 978-1-4976-0411-7. 218.
  4. "A too-long critical autopsy of Gene Roddenberry's novelization of 'Star Trek: The Motion Picture'" by Kevin Church, January 7, 2020, They Boldly Wrote.
  5. Gene Roddenberry: The Myth and the Man Behind Star Trek by Joel Engel, Hyperion Books, June 1995, pages 198-199.
  6. "Five Stages of Reading the Novelization of Star Trek: The Motion Picture" by Ellen Cheeseman-Meyer, Tor.com, December 12, 2013.