or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
 
 
Express Checkout with PayPhrase
What's this? | Create PayPhrase
More Buying Choices
111 used & new from $0.01

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
   
Wagon Train to the Stars (Star Trek No 89, New Earth Book One of Six)
 
 

Wagon Train to the Stars (Star Trek No 89, New Earth Book One of Six) (Mass Market Paperback)

~ (Author) "DISTANT NIGHT, the most distant..." (more)
Key Phrases: quasar olivium, lightship keeper, quake moon, Belle Terre, Billy Maidenshore, Gamma Night (more...)
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)

Price: $6.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
Temporarily out of stock.
Order now and we'll deliver when available. We'll e-mail you with an estimated delivery date as soon as we have more information. Your account will only be charged when we ship the item.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com. Gift-wrap available.

13 new from $2.20 95 used from $0.01 3 collectible from $10.00

Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
  Kindle Edition, June 26, 2000 $6.99 -- --
  Unbound, Import, November 30, 2000 -- -- --
  Mass Market Paperback, May 31, 2000 $6.99 $2.20 $0.01

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Thin Air (Star Trek: New Earth, Book 5) by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

Wagon Train to the Stars (Star Trek No 89, New Earth Book One of Six) + Thin Air (Star Trek: New Earth, Book 5)
Price For Both: $13.49

One of these items ships sooner than the other. Show details

  • This item: Wagon Train to the Stars (Star Trek No 89, New Earth Book One of Six) by Diane Carey

    Temporarily out of stock.
    Order now and we'll deliver when available. We'll e-mail you with an estimated delivery date as soon as we have more information. Your account will only be charged when we ship the item.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

  • Thin Air (Star Trek: New Earth, Book 5) by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details


Special Offers and Product Promotions


Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

Belle Terre (Star Trek: New Earth, Book 2)

Belle Terre (Star Trek: New Earth, Book 2)

by Dean Wesley Smith
The Flaming Arrow (Star Trek: New Earth, Book 4)

The Flaming Arrow (Star Trek: New Earth, Book 4)

by Kathy Oltion
Rough Trails (Star Trek: New Earth, Book 3)

Rough Trails (Star Trek: New Earth, Book 3)

by L. A. Graf
Challenger (Star Trek, New Earth, Book 6)

Challenger (Star Trek, New Earth, Book 6)

by Diane Carey
Assignment: Eternity (Star Trek: The Original Series)

Assignment: Eternity (Star Trek: The Original Series)

by G. Cox
Explore similar items

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

After saving Earth from the threat of V'Ger, James T. Kirk is called again to the final frontier. His new mission: to lead a valiant group of settlers to a distant world, to defend the struggling colony from alien threats, and to explore the diverse mysteries and dangers of a strange new Earth!

Far from the Federation, a newly discovered M-class world has been eyed as a potential home by a group of hardy and determined colonists. Starþeet can spare only one starship to escort the would-be settlers on their perilous voyage, but that ship is none other than the legendary Starship Enterprise™, commanded by the most well-known captain in the quadrant. Now Kirk finds himself responsible for the lives of 30,000 men, women, and children -- a task that grows all the more difficult when the expedition is caught in the middle of an ancient feud between two dangerous alien races!



Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One

Distant night, the most distant. Today, a giant's finger of tractless lingering haze dusted space deep cobalt blue, painting the otherwise ink matte of weeks past. Everything changed day by day, even space itself.

Or perhaps it was only anger.

Prowling the central command deck, surrounded by a raised walkway that supported all the consoles and monitors that showed him the universe, Captain James Kirk bedeviled his starship's forward viewscreen with a punitive glare, as if he could mentally brutalize what he saw into submission.

"Red alert," he ordered, "again."

"Captain," Lieutenant Commander Uhura broached from the communications post, "we never stood down from the previous one."

Kirk ignored her. "Get the owner over here right now. Sulu, detonate those shots."

"Trying, sir."

The starship's bridge pulsed with activity. Colored lights winked, and soft mechanical noises sang in the background, a self-driven symphony of never-ending background music that could seem either comforting or nerve-racking, depending upon the construction of any given peace or panic.

Today, Kirk let his nerves go ahead and rack. Somehow it was a message from the ship that she would act out his will, that he was still in charge.

"Mr. Spock," he asked, "is that drone automated or manned?"

On the upper deck walkway, watching the main screen like a cat on the hunt, the starship's first officer was as much comfort as Kirk would get on this mission. Sharp-eyed and dynamic, standing out on a bridge otherwise manned by humans, the Vulcan posed a narrow form particularly imperial in the new Starfleet colors of brick and black. His slick black hair, cut in the style of banks and points that now was famous in the Federation, caught a band of light from the red-alert beacon, which also framed the triangle of his left ear as he turned. "We're not certain whether it's manned, sir. Sensors pick up no life signs, but may be fouled by the industrial machinery on board. Some of Mrs. Webb's factory ships do have security guards stationed with sensitive data files."

"Then we can't blow it up -- yet. Invasive maneuvers, Mr. Sulu, get between that drone and Oregon Trail. Double shields port, right now."

"Port double shields, aye," the steady helmsman answered. Kirk was glad Sulu had come on this mission. Even though the course was essentially straight out into the middle of nowhere at noteworthy speeds, the helm at the hands of Hikaru Sulu somehow behaved just a thought better than at anyone else's.

The reassuring repeat of orders gave a sense of control to an uncontrolled situation. The starship moved forward through a magnificent funnel of spacefaring ships, every size and construction, that now moved aside for her. The view from here was eerie -- dozens after dozens of ships flooding past, heading back as the starship headed forward. At the helm, Commander Sulu hammered coordinates and traffic directions into his computer console, sweeping the flotilla away from the danger point.

Though only a few seconds of pause lay before him, Kirk stole those moments to commune silently with the great entourage of ships he was here to lead. Huge Conestoga-class dormitory ships, with their bird-beak bows and bulbous living sections, plowed past with deceiving grace, each pushed by brilliantly conceived devices designed just for this journey by Engineer Scott -- two detachable "mule" engines, huge rocks of unadorned muscle that could tow or push at fantastic ratios. Thus driven, the big people-mover ships were incarnations of the first iron horses steaming out toward treacherous frontiers, over scorching deserts, windy plains, and frozen mountains, hoping they'd make it to the other side.

Sprinkled among the Conestogas were private yachts, tenders, industrial drones, the mercy ship, the garden ship, the governor's VIP transport...What a sight. More than seventy ships, clustered in one area of space. Even after five months in space, it was shocking to look at them all, moving together in a great flock. Kirk was used to being in space, but alone out here, with his one powerful vessel, and the family of crew. Though the crew of four hundred had always seemed bulky as ships' complements went, Kirk had found new epiphanies in the past months, leading a convoy of over sixty-four thousand colonists to a promised land -- a land they had promised to themselves and were determined to settle, a dream they themselves had conjured and hammered into shape.

Here came the coroner ship, sedate and dignified in its promise to do whatever sad jobs came its way. Kirk tried to ignore the passing of Twilight Sentinel, but her presence off his starship's port bow jolted him back to the cold fact that he was facing a tragedy in the making and if he made the wrong decision, that ship would be full of bodies.

He pressed his hands to his command chair and pushed to his feet as the privateer ship Hunter's Moon slid past, her scratched black and green dazzlepainted hull gliding by at what seemed like arm's length. There, in the open space as the privateer cleared the viewscreen, was the tortured Conestoga Oregon Trail, being assaulted by a drone ship that had lost its mind. The functional-ugly drone, with its retractable docking claws all out, clutched at the Conestoga like a headless insect. Its flashes of torch phasers, several time brighter than they should be, crashed across the hulls of both free-floating vessels. Sparks danced into space, clouding the view. If those torches cut through the Conestoga's hide, this malfunction could quickly become a disaster.

Around him, the starship's refitted bridge glowed with the scarlet hue of red alert. In his misty mind, Kirk sometimes expected to see this place as it once had been, with its rows of etched black screens, the red rail, muted carpet, and grade-school colors that had seemed so crisp and happy. The refit had made the bridge more technical, more cold and metallic, but under the skin she murmured to him that she was still that old ship of his many adventures, the sturdy grand dame that had serviced the Federation so dependably. She recognized him despite the change, and he felt more at home by the hour.

At the engineering post, the convoy's senior engineer, Montgomery Scott, turned his iron-gray head and looked at the drone ship on the main screen harassing the Conestoga. Irritably he reported, "That damned box has sealed all its hatches now, sir. The hull's electrified and it keeps evading grapples. Nobody can get inside while the shields are up. The thing's gone completely raving."

Spock turned again. "Captain, I estimate eleven minutes to critical overload of those industrial phasers at this enhancement level."

Kirk flattened his lips. "Nothing compared to what'll happen when I get my hands on whoever enhanced them. Ah -- Captain Kilkenny."

"Kilvennan," came the correction. "Michael."

On the upper deck, just coming out of the turbolift, was one of the privateer captains, in fact the captain of Hunter's Moon, which had just sailed past. Escorted by Lieutenant Chekov, with shaggy long hair and a musketeer beard, Michael Kilvennan was everything James Kirk imagined the captain of folklore to be -- a mold that, ironically, he had never quite fit. Kilvennan wore a brown turtleneck and a belted sheepskin vest, setting him instantly apart from the starship's crew in their fitted blood-red uniform jackets and black trousers. In fact, the privateer captain looked uneasy standing next to the perpetually tidy Chekov.

"You better have a word with Mr. Chekov here," the privateer demanded. "Beaming me off my ship without permission -- "

"We don't have time for permission, Captain," Kirk told him sharply. "And I have emergency authority." He jabbed a thumb over his shoulder at the scene on the main viewer. "That one of your drones?"

"My mother runs the line of trailing industrial drones," Kilvennan confirmed, watching the action before them in space. "Helen Kilvennan Webb. She works on the CP Crystobel, but our family lives on the Yukon. She's the one who should be here. Those drones trail after the commercial pilot -- "

"Like little ducks," Kirk nodded. "You'll do for now. Yukon's under medical quarantine."

"I'll 'do'? Just because Mr. Chekov's handling Expedition security doesn't mean he gets to yank people off their own ships and haul them around the fleet."

"Yes, it does. Your mother's drone is attacking one of our passenger ships. I need to know what's on it right now and whether I'm free to destroy it if I have to."

Kilvennan scowled. "Who cares what's on it? Blow the damned thing up!"

A voice entered the argument from the upper deck. "Captain, you can't!"

Kirk turned -- so did everybody -- to the future colony's young governor as he raised a hand from where he stood next to Scott. An idealist's idealist, Evan Pardonnet was a man for whom youth provided a shield against the digs that picked away at beliefs and dreams. He had planned this massive one-stroke colonial movement, overlorded its every development, and bristled at the Federation's inclusion of Starfleet into the mix at the last minute. James Kirk had cast away his mantle of admiralty and once again put on a captain's hat, and accepted command of the Starship Enterprise to go into deep space, escorting and guarding the greatest colonial project in United Federation of Planets history.

Easy on the drawing board. Reality was a picker bush. For five months Kirk and Pardonnet had wrestled over who had authority to do what. In a crisis situation, should the colonists look to their fleet captain, or to their governor? Was there time for a committee meeting? The governor now argued his point in his usual way -- passionately.

"Mrs. Webb's line of drones," he protested, "is manufacturing things we'll need almost immediately to set up a decent first year on Belle Terre! We've got to protect it!"

"Blow it up," the owner's son repeated. Kilvennan seemed relaxed, but his eyes were fixed on the ghastly scene playing out in space, the drone ship carving plates off the Oregon Trail's weakening blue side. "Webb Three's a manufacturing plant making subassemblies for industrial goods. Kitchenware, that's all -- "

"Our ovens, ranges, refrigeration units!" The governor clenched and unclenched his hands until his palms were red. "Filtration systems, hydrators, dehydrators, waste-recyclers -- we need those, Captain Kirk!"

But Kilvennan stood his ground. "What good's that stuff if you let it kill three thousand colonists?"

Kirk swung to him. "What kind of phasers has that thing got, Kilvennan?"

"Ah...level-six cutting torches, I think -- "

"How'd they get up to level three?"

Pulling his hands from his pockets, Kilvennan bumped forward against the bridge rail. "Level three! That's impossible!"

"You're looking at it."

"Those are supposed to be level-six industrials, defensive at short range to deflect meteors! Cutting phasers, that's all!"

"Captain Kilvennan," Spock interrupted, "if your mother's had her phasers enhanced, she's in violation of Belle Terre Colonial Expedition statutes."

"And," Kirk firmly finished, "she'll be held criminally responsible for any deaths caused by that drone."

Kilvennan met him with a gale-force glare. "Who in hell do you think you are, making a charge like that? If those phasers are enhanced, they'll overload! Don't you think we know that?"

Meeting the other captain's anger point for point, Kirk snarled, "Is there any living person on board? Anyone at all?"

"Nobody. Webb Three, Four, Six, and Nine are all completely automated. My parents run them by telemetry from the CP."

At the comm station, Uhura had her hand to her earpiece. "Sir, Captain Briggs is hailing from the Tugantine. Should he move in with Norfolk Rebel and pry that drone off the Conestoga?"

"Not even the Tugantine's engines could break that drone's tractors," Kirk calculated. "Not under fire, anyway. Tell him to stand by."

Scott poked at his engineering controls and scowled. "The drone's tractored itself directly to the Conestoga's hull, sir. There's not two inches between them now."

Irreconcilably prowling the command deck, Kirk seized the problem and applied his pure will to it. The chilling sight of the factory drone chewing at a ship with three thousand passengers on board -- they might as well have been watching a cougar gnaw the leg of an elephant. Was there anything more frightening than a machine that had lost its mind?

Even through the gap of space between him and the Conestoga, he sensed the shrieks of fear, the huddling in horror, the confusion and desperation aboard that dormitory ship. He felt in his bones the painful thrumming of vibration from attack as it ran through the skin of the ship and up through the feet of those people and into their shuddering limbs. They were scared. He felt that. They needed him. He felt that too.

The bridge was all lit up with "windows" out to space. He saw all that was around them, all the ships of the Belle Terre Colonial Expedition, the thousands of civilians standing side by side with their spouses and children, watching what he would do next to save their neighbors, depending on him and judging him based upon the coming few minutes.

He hated an audience. Missions could be handled. Shows were messy.

Were they all thinking about the good old Earth they'd left behind, sinking into a gemlike backdrop, likely never to be seen again? Or were their minds on the planet they were heading toward, another Earth with clear skies and gleaming oceans, continents flushed as if they'd just been kissed?

Kirk was jolted as the last few ships cleared the way. The Conestoga Lakota, with her warp mule engines driving like Hadrian's elephants. The industrial ship Macedon towing an iceberg -- their water source in space. The huge Olympian, repository for thousands of micro-scaffolds growing body parts for cryo-freeze. The coroner ship Twilight Sentinel with her elegant purple hull and white lights, the dairy barge loaded with real cattle and real cowboys. Wreckmaster Briggs moving his Tugantine out of the way. Finally the Starfleet combat support tender Beowulf skimmed past the starship and flashed her running lights in a good-luck salute.

Beowulf was the last of the Expedition ships blocking the way. Now the Conestoga Oregon Trail and her bulldog attacker stood alone on the vista of space, glowing in the airbrushed light of a sun they were passing, and Kirk was at center stage.

"Nine minutes to overload." Spock's baritone voice pretended emotionlessness, but that was a lie.

"Captain," the governor pressed, "I know what you're thinking and I don't like it. The colonists are depending on those drones. Webb Three's the only one manufacturing appliance subsystems. The Webbs have spacedock facilities, computer components, all sorts of things critical to our setting up a viable spaceport in record time! Please don't fire on their factory drone!"

Ignoring him, Kirk turned to the privateer captain. "When did you first notice its erratic behavior, Mr. Kilvennan?"

"It's Captain Kilvennan, and my mother's sensors noticed the rogue at the same time you did, Captain Kirk."

Suddenly ferocious, Kirk snapped, "Don't get provoked with me. I'm having a bad week and I'm not in a good mood."

Though Kilvennan visibly boiled under the skin, he offered helpful information. "My first mate wondered if maybe the lightship's signal scrambled Webb Three's autonav. I told him I didn't think we were picking up a signal yet from the Hatteras."

Spock turned to him. "We've been receiving a phase-distant homing signal from the lightship for nearly four days, Captain Kilvennan. Only this morning it finally went to proximity one. The lightship uses extreme-range sensors to gather information, then broadcast them to anyone who might need them."

"Not now, Spock," Kirk preempted. "We're not sure what set that drone off, but no stray signal's going to change level-six torches to level-three disruptive phasers. So somebody's been tampering. Now the ship's gone rogue and it's trying to cut up a people-mover with three thousand passengers on board."

Governor Pardonnet sweated as he watched the Conestoga on the main screen. "Can't we have one day without an accident?"

"This is no accident," Kirk rejected. "If it were just a malfunction, that drone would've snatched one of its own line of drones or some ship close to it. Instead it went right for the Oregon Trail, ignoring ten other vessels in its way."

Before them as the starship drew cautiously nearer, the chunky manufacturer ship, with its thick arms and pods extended like claws, assaulted the helpless Conestoga. Flashes of torch phasers, five times brighter than they should be, brightened the flanks of both vessels. At the helm, Sulu settled down to concentrate on moving just the starship now that the rest of the Expedition ships were out of the way.

Kilvennan asked, "Can't you fry its autopilot with a microburst?"

"As you pointed out," Spock answered, "enhanced phasers are quirkish. A burst might set them into critical mode."

Hearing their voices as if detached by a thousand miles, James Kirk gripped the back of his command chair as the starship pulled closer, narrowing the distance between itself and the crazed drone. The Conestoga loomed so large on the screen that he could count its hull bolts.

"When it flew off on its own," Kilvennan offered, "my mother contacted me and told me to broadcast commands in our private code when it came past Hunter's Moon, but it wouldn't accept. Instead it passed right by the other ships and went for Oregon and started opening up."

"Seven minutes," Spock reminded.

Kirk almost snarled at him to quit counting, but held back. "Chekov, go down to auxiliary control and use the battle targeting computer to take a pinpoint firing fix on that drone. Contact us the minute you've pulled it up."

"I'll be there in thirty seconds, sir!" Chekov brushed past Kilvennan and plunged into the lift. With a hiss he was gone, and the young privateer captain stood alone on the aft walkway.

"Mr. Kilvennan," Kirk summoned, "would you come down here and take his post at weapons and navigation."

Startled, Kilvennan stepped back. "Nah, you don't want me. Never even been on a starship's bridge."

"And I've never been a privateer. The seat's right here. You're the one who wants to blow it up, and I need somebody to push the button when I give the order."

Making a decision he didn't like, Michael Kilvennan stepped down to the lower deck, grumbling, "Bet you haven't heard the word 'no' in twenty years." He slipped into the nav chair next to Sulu and tried to make sense of the multilights on the board before him. "Why don't we just blow it up now? Why wait?"

"We've got to get it off Oregon Trail's hull," Kirk said, "or it'll rip a hole in that ship the size of a gymnasium. There's Chekov's tie-in. He just connected."

Pointing at a grid on the right side of the board, Kirk moved around to Kilvennan's side, feeling compact and chiseled in comparison to the lanky hired gun with his long hair and rugged clothing.

"You're in my way," Kilvennan accused.

But Kirk didn't move. He paused in midstep, fingertips of his left hand poised on the nav console. He was looking up at the science station.

The ultimate of verticality, Spock continued to look down at him as if they had all the time ever made. Had they both stopped breathing? Kirk felt the eyes of Scott and Uhura, who knew them both so well. Governor Pardonnet was watching him too, but in a completely different way. So was Kilvennan.

"It did go straight for the Oregon Trail," Kirk murmured. "Didn't it?"

Spock peered at him. "The ID beacon?"

Kirk slapped the helm with a flat palm. "Try it, Spock! Sulu, shields down!"

"Our shields, sir?" Sulu asked. "Oh -- of course! Shields down, sir!"

"Phaser overload on the drone," Spock ticked off, "within six minutes."

Six minutes, and the factory drone would blow itself up without help.

"What's going on?" Kilvennan asked.

Spinning to face the main screen again, Kirk quickly said, "Something must've told that drone which ship to attack. That means specific signal identification!"

"And that means programming," Scott punctuated.

Suddenly they were all milking their consoles, concentrating on prying that dangerous drone off the skin of the Conestoga. Again Kirk took his spare two seconds to empathize with the people on board that dorm ship -- emergency evac drills, abandon-ship procedures, waking the children and fitting them with EV units --

And Uhura sitting up there at her post as if she were just a switchboard operator, showing none of the fabulous power of action she possessed as the Expedition's drillmaster and safety tsar. Were her drills coming to good use over there? Would lives be saved?

"Sir," she called, "Mr. Chekov signals he's ready."

"Have him stand by." Kirk's voice was gravelly with anticipation. He wanted to shoot at something. "You heard that, Kilvennan?"

"Still trying to figure out these lights. Don't count on me."

"Right there." Kirk pointed at an amber control grid. "That's the important one for you."

"Got it."

"Spock?"

One wrist pressed to the edge of his board, Spock pecked at the controls. He frowned, dissatisfied. "I'm unable to shut down the Conestoga's beacon by remote. There's some sort of signal refusal."

Cranking around, Kirk grasped the back of his command chair. "Ship to ship, Uhura, quickly. Oregon Trail, this is Enterprise. Shut down your ID beacon immediately. That drone is homing in on your code."

"Enterprise, Captain Trautner. We figured that out, but our beacon won't neutralize. It's locked up. It'll take hours to purge the system. That thing's cutting through our hull!"

"Evacuate passengers to the other side of -- "

"And shut the hatches. I did, but if it breaches the hull in the wrong place, we'll have a pressure detonation. Can't you blast it?"

"Negative. The explosion would take out your port quarter. Keep working on that signal. Spock, broadcast the Conestoga's signal anyway. Maybe we can confuse that thing into letting go if it gets the signal from two sources."

Kilvennan looked up. "Why are you dropping your shields?"

"If we don't," Scott answered, "the drone won't be able to tractor onto us and it'll go looking for the Conestoga again."

Kirk's shoulders bunched under the uniform jacket. "Target phasers."

"About time," Kilvennan reminded, his hand poised over the firing control.

"Bring the ship to -- "

"Captain, please!" Governor Pardonnet's brown hair flopped forward. "We'll be cooking over open fires for a year while we rebuild that infrastructure. There's got to be a way to neutralize it -- "

"You're going to have to let me finish a sentence one of these days, Governor." Kirk gave him a mellow glance. "Mr. Kilvennan, target our phasers and prepare to detonate the beam, and only the beam, if that drone fires on us, understood? Chekov'll provide pinpoint coordinates on your upper left."

"Left...got it."

"Spock, are we broadcasting?"

"Yes, sir. The drone is unresponsive. It believes it has found its quarry and won't release."

"Boost the signal. Overwhelm the Conestoga's signal with the same code. Blast that thing in the ears. Pull in close, Sulu."

"Proximity range in thirteen seconds, sir," Sulu said, tipping his shoulders as he turned the ship.

Almost coming out of his chair, Kilvennan snatched a quick breath. "It's breaking free of the Conestoga!"

Sometimes victory could be horrifying. The angry drone ship, with its claws extended and its mechanical mind focused, clunked free of the dorm ship and turned its attack on the starship. Moving closer and growing larger by the millisecond, it was on them in instants. The starship jolted suddenly as it was struck by a phaser hit. Even a level-three phaser at this nearness could deal a bad blow. If it hit a nacelle --

"Firing on us," Sulu mentioned casually.

Spock watched his console instead of the gigantic crawling monster on the screen as it approached, then dipped below the ship's saucer-shaped primary hull. "Drone is tractoring on our engineering section. Five minutes to phaser-critical."

Tensely Kirk lowered his chin and digested the fact that they were now aboard the powerful drone's chosen target. "Mr. Sulu, bear off from the Expedition ships. Give us room to maneuver."

"Room to blow up, you mean," Kilvennan openly stated, and met Kirk's glare fearlessly.

"Target the drone's shield assembly," Kirk gnashed to him, "and fire, right now."

Kilvennan's hand went to the amber grid.

Phasers lashed from the starship's underbelly to the drone now clamped to her engineering hull. On the main screen now was a view of the drone latched freakishly on. The phaser cut a fiery line across the gap, struck the drone's shield array, and the array disintegrated. Only a scorched bruise, smoking and sparking, remained where the assembly had been mounted on the drone's bow.

"Drone's shields are down," Spock confirmed. "It's still compromising our hull. Opening fire now...four minutes thirty seconds to critical."

"I'll take care of it." Kirk took Kilvennan by the arm and yanked him out of his chair.

"What -- " Kilvennan tripped on the steps leading to the upper deck.

Kirk dragged him the rest of the way, kicked open a maintenance trunk, fished around, and pulled out a magnetic oct-shank cyclospanner, a heavy hand tool, cast in traditional black ore, that only saw use about once every decade but was the only one for the job when it was needed. It was the right shape, and didn't conduct.

"Spock, beam us over there right now."

Kilvennan wrenched his arm away. "You crazy?"

"You're coming with me, like it or not," Kirk told him. "You know your way around inside that thing."

"Beam over there four minutes from critical? You're nuts! I'm not one of your crew to order around!"

"In that case, when I come back I'm arresting your mother."

"Hell -- you mean when we get back."

"Spock, the guidance-control section, right now!"

Beside Kirk as the buzz of transport filled their ears, Kilvennan stripped out of his sheepskin vest and dumped it on the deck. "Shoulda stayed in Chicago!"

Copyright © 2000 by Paramount Pictures. All rights reserved.


Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Star Trek (June 1, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0671042963
  • ISBN-13: 978-0671042967
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.4 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #768,010 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #28 in  Books > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Authors, A-Z > ( C ) > Carey, Diane

More About the Author

Diane Carey
Discover books, learn about writers, read author blogs, and more.

Visit Amazon's Diane Carey Page

Inside This Book (learn more)



Books on Related Topics (learn more)
 
Captain's Glory by William Shatner
The Return by William Shatner
Ex Machina by Christopher L. Bennett
Vulcan's Forge by Josepha Sherman
 

What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Wagon Train to the Stars (Star Trek No 89, New Earth Book One of Six)
66% buy the item featured on this page:
Wagon Train to the Stars (Star Trek No 89, New Earth Book One of Six) 2.9 out of 5 stars (21)
$6.99
Star Trek: Federation
10% buy
Star Trek: Federation 4.6 out of 5 stars (83)
$8.93
Star Trek: Mirror Universe: Shards and Shadows
9% buy
Star Trek: Mirror Universe: Shards and Shadows 4.1 out of 5 stars (7)
$12.48
Star Trek: Myriad Universes: Infinity's Prism (Bk. 1)
9% buy
Star Trek: Myriad Universes: Infinity's Prism (Bk. 1) 4.5 out of 5 stars (15)
$10.88

Tags Customers Associate with This Product

 (What's this?)
Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
 
(1)

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

 

Customer Reviews

21 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (6)
2 star:
 (5)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.9 out of 5 stars (21 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A nice start, May 30, 2000
By A Customer
Well, it's summer time and that can only mean one thing--the beginning of a new, multi-novel Star Trek saga, courtesy of Pocket Books. Last year's Double Helix series was a hit-or-miss affair that dealt with events in the TNG universe. This summer, Pocket treats us to the long-awaited classic Trek crossover series. And first up, is Diane Carey's "Wagon Train to the Stars."

All in all, I've got to say this is a good start to the series. What really works is that Carey plunks us down in the middle of the story and fills in details via flashbacks and the characters interacting. The series takes place between the events seen in The Motion Picture and Wrath of Khan and finds Kirk, having temporarily taken a reduction in rank to Captain, leading a fleet of colonists to a new world that is nine months away. The first novel sets up the secondary characters and establishes the mood and the scene. It also sets into place the fact that the planet our heroes are headed for isn't what it seems (frustratingly enough, one of the characters knows what is going on but refuses to tell any one or give any hints....oh well, I guess it is a six-part series and we'll find out soon enough). Before you know it, Kirk is up to his ears in squabbles, disputes and egos other than his. It's interesting look at Kirk as he tries to deal with leading a group of people that aren't in Starfleet and don't necessarily want or have to follow his orders. There's internal intrigue as well as an external threat or two (the planet the colonists are heading for is at the center of two, ancient warring races and the Orions aren't far behind--seeing the colonists as potential profit in the slave trade). Carey balances a lot of elements to make an entertaining novel and one that sets up events well. The stage is set for the next five books and there's enough mysteries involved to keep me curious as what's to come next.

My only fear is that we won't find out the planet's myterious secret until book six and the other four books will be a holding pattern of sorts. Also, minor characters are being set up to be in conflict and you can see some of Kirk's headahces that are ahead. I only hope Carey and the rest of the authors will take some chances and not give into a standard, cliched Trek storyline.

All that said, I will say that Wagon Train to the Stars is a good start. It's an enjoyable summer Trek read--not too heavy, but not too light. I'm definitely interested to see what happens next.

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars ST #89 Wagon Train to the Stars - Poor balance and pacing!, October 26, 2003
By K. Wyatt "ssintrepid" (St. Louis, MO United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Star Trek #89 "Wagon Train to the Stars" is the first book in the New Earth series. The concept behind this six book series is Captain Kirk, who, after the events depicted in "Star Trek The Motion Picture" has given up his Admiral's rank to Captain the Enterprise as she leads an "armada" of over sixty thousand would be colonists who are on their way to Belle Terre to begin a new life.

At the core of this concept is a very solid and interesting premise. To see the stalwart hero of Star Trek leading an enormous group of civilians who don't exactly have to bide by the rules of Starfleet on an extraordinarily long trek (pun intended) through space, out of Federation space, into the unknown to settle a tame but raw M (Munshara) class planet and begin a new life. The colonists and their governor, Evan Pardonnet is seeking to not only start a new colony, but they also wish to be almost entirely independent from the Federation.

With that very basic concept laid out, concept creator and author Diane Carey leads off this series of books with "A Wagon Train to the Stars." From the beginning I found this concept to have been an interesting one and was looking forward to getting to these books, despite the generally lackluster reviews and ratings for the majority of the books in this series; wishing to judge for myself upon reading them.

If time devoted to reading a particular book is any indicator of how well a book was written, this novel doesn't score too well because I found that I just couldn't relate to it very well based on its pacing. I've been reading Star Trek fiction for years now and I'm not normally one to critique Star Trek novels too harshly based on continuity and pacing problems generally because the majority of the novels are just entertaining and quick reads that equivocate to a good Star Trek "fix," if you will.

I found "A Wagon Train to the Stars" to be a contradiction to many of Diane Carey's past stories in that at times, it seemed to be disjointed or more or less she would just skip over certain parts that needed to be there, assuming that the reader was still with her. I don't know if this was spawned from her original manuscript or poor editing on the part of the publisher.

I've found that many Star Trek fiction readers have complained of Diane Carey's adding her extensive knowledge of naval terminology into the twenty third and twenty fourth century terminology of Starfleet to be distracting. I don't particularly agree with this point of view; while such terminology is not canon to the series, it just gives her novels a distinct flavor all her own and I've found it to be interesting.

The cover art for this first book in the New Earth series can be counted among the best in the Star Trek fiction genre. It is certainly very rare indeed that this much effort is put into one of these covers.

The premise:

I've already covered the "basic" premise to this first novel in the series. Along with that, Captain Kirk finds himself, leading this armada of colony ships to Belle Terre, but along the way he finds that he must deal with a criminal named Billy Maidenshore who he'd personally arrested not too long before this mission began. Somehow, Maidenshore worked the legal system and didn't stay behind bars very long and has worked his way into to this colony and has sworn to cause as many problems for Captain Kirk and company as he can.

Combining that aspect and the general problems that Captain Kirk finds himself dealing with as the "imposed" leader of this expedition and the sixty thousand plus colonists makes for some interesting but not well executed plot between himself and several different leading characters. He soon finds that he must find a way to earn the trust and confidence of these colonists in order to more efficiently lead this colony on its trip or they will most certainly fail and perish.

The one saving grace for this novel is the extremely well executed conclusion to it, where Diane Carey pulled some of her better writing abilities out of the proverbial hat and put it on the page, so to speak!

In conclusion, being a devout Star Trek fiction reader, I'd recommend this novel as it is the first in the series and gives the basics for the rest of the books, I would have to say that this is not the best novel Diane Carey has put on the shelves, but it is most certainly not the worst in the world of Star Trek fiction. If this is or was the first Diane Carey Star Trek novel you've read or are reading, I implore you not to take the position that this is what all of her novels are like. The good majority of her novels can be categorized as among the best in Star Trek fiction that are completely enjoyable reads. {ssintrepid}

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Fair Trek to the Stars, April 16, 2001
After reading several of the Trek novels this one truly is a wagon train to the stars. Kirk having to cope with the uncertain future that he might not make it to the new planet "Belle Terre". How he relates to the civilians and rebels make for interesting reading. However this book series should have been three parts. Six parts is milking it. The best Treks are the two part or three parts..this one was a struggle to read through as good as it was.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
 
 
 
Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Terrible terrible terrible
This book is easily the worst Trek novel I have ever read and that includes fan fiction. The novel fails in every category. Stilted dialog makes it a chore to slog through. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Daniel Rodriguez

3.0 out of 5 stars Neither Diane Carey's best, nor her worst.
Diane Carey is somewhat restrained in her attempts to play "wordsmith" in this book, which is a good thing. Read more
Published 13 months ago by James Yanni

3.0 out of 5 stars And the series only goes down from here
I've read the first five of these. Carey sets up some really interesting premises and characters in the first book. Read more
Published 19 months ago by S. Raines

3.0 out of 5 stars Not one of Diane Carey's Better Books
When Gene Roddenberry first proposed Star Trek to the networks he tried to get them to 'buy' into the series by saying it was going to be a type of space-western, a "Wagon Train... Read more
Published on May 10, 2007 by D. J Stemke

2.0 out of 5 stars A lot of potential, but not so great.
I remember reading the cover of this book and thinking that I was really going to enjoy reading it. Then I did read it and was disappointed. Read more
Published on December 28, 2004 by AJ Starling

4.0 out of 5 stars One of my new faves
Diane Carey, Diane Duane and LA Graf are my fave ST writers, so I always enjoy their stores, and this is no exception. Read more
Published on December 24, 2004 by B. Redfern

1.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't finish the series.
I bought all six volumes of this series, of which this book is the first, at a used bookstore. I've read several other Star Trek novels and enjoyed them, and thus looked forward... Read more
Published on September 4, 2004 by A reader

5.0 out of 5 stars loved every chapter
this is a brilliant book,they just keep coming up with good enterprise stories and prove again that there is nothing this crew cannot acomplish,the other side of the coin comes... Read more
Published on January 15, 2004 by Mr. P. Brown

2.0 out of 5 stars Diane "Betty Sue" Carey Strikes again...
Mark Twain once described Richard Wagner's music as being "better than it sounds." This sentiment sums up my feelings of Diane Carey's Trek novels. Read more
Published on September 19, 2002 by Jay Tea

4.0 out of 5 stars A good star trek adventure
Captain Kirk and the enterprise lead a group of pioneers to a distant planet to be settled by federation citizens. Read more
Published on September 7, 2002

Only search this product's reviews



Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
Search all Amazon discussions
   




Product Information from the Amapedia Community

Beta (What's this?)


Look for Similar Items by Category


Look for Similar Items by Subject

 

Feedback

If you need help or have a question for Customer Service, contact us.
 Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
Is there any other feedback you would like to provide?

Your comments can help make our site better for everyone.


Your Recent History

 (What's this?)

After viewing product detail pages or search results, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.