#048: Spock’s World (TOS event novel)

This week, Vulcan considers pulling out of the Federation upon feeling like they’re not benefiting much from the deal, and Kirk, Spock, and Bones are summoned to testify in favor of Vulcan sticking around. As they prepare their remarks, anonymous internet trolls post their two cents, lasagna is served, and the Enterprise mixer rages on. Along the way, the history of Vulcan unfolds through tales of some of its less noble moments. How do they store fresh coffee on the Enterprise? How would a Vulcan work out the logic in becoming addicted to video games? Is this Duane!McCoy’s biggest mic drop yet? It’s the book where we learn how Amanda really feels about Sarek.

Spock’s World
Author: Diane Duane
Pages: 388
Published: September 1988
Timeline: After The Motion Picture
Prerequisites: As far as canon, “Amok Time” (TOS S2E1), which might actually count as a spoiler depending on how well you can put two and two together. The Romulan Way (TOS #35) isn’t required, but if you’ve read it, you’ll be prepared for this book’s structure, since it’s identical. Otherwise, familiarity with major original characters from previous Duane novels, especially The Wounded Sky (TOS #13), is recommended.

It doesn’t take much to yank the Enterprise crew back from shore leave, but rare is the event of enough import for them not to complain about it. In this case, Vulcan is considering seceding from the Federation. Someone’s put a bee in their bonnet about associating with humans, and a growing number of Vulcans want to pull back before human cultures and attitudes irreversibly rub off on them (and vice versa). As off-worlders who have had intimate and mostly positive experiences with Vulcan culture, Kirk, Spock, and McCoy are summoned to participate in a formal debate in opposition of the decision; Sarek is compelled by duty to his government to argue in favor of pulling back, even though he really really doesn’t want to.

While you wait for the formal debates, put your feet up and relax, because the first third of Spock’s World could very well be Star Trek‘s longest victory lap for itself since The Motion Picture spent seven minutes swooping around the Enterprise in spacedock. It takes over 200 pages to get to the debates, and in the meantime, the crew members are slowly but surely summoned back to the ship, the head of Recreation throws a cozy little mixer, and a subplot unfolds where Kirk lurks on the Enterprise Discord to get a feel for general sentiment about the secession that amounts to forum drama.1 This may not seem like the most thrilling stuff, but the pace is better described as luxuriant than glacial, and for anyone who wants to know more about the more mundane day-to-day operations of the Enterprise, it’s practically catnip.

Of course, it’s not all hanging out on the Enterprise. Like Duane’s previous novel The Romulan Way, the chapters of Spock’s World alternate between the present and the history of the featured race (in this case, Vulcans, obviously), though here it’s been tweaked somewhat. Rather than a straight historical account, the history of Vulcan is told through short stories set in various pre-logic and -enlightenment eras, from the formation of the planet itself to the rises of Surak and Sarek. These paint a much more chaotic picture of Vulcan than we’re accustomed to thinking about—one of a people still consumed and ruled by roiling emotions, often overcome by emotional motivations like power, greed, and/or vengeance, and for the most part just trying to eke out whatever even slightly non-miserable existence they can.

As much as I personally greatly enjoyed these segments, I keep going back and forth on their actual usefulness or relevance. Without them, the book barely reaches the length of a standard numbered book, to say nothing of meriting event status. The audiobook omits the Vulcan chapters entirely, which while hurting my heart is possible to do without hurting the main secession plot. And I think, strangely, that there’s this sweet spot you kind of have to be in where this book will have its maximum possible impact on you. If you don’t know enough about Star Trek before reading it, you won’t appreciate how far the Vulcans had to come to get to the culmination of their adoption of logic and cthia, and if you know too much, the Vulcan stories will just seem like little more than well-performed thought exercises. On the other hand, because the two halves are largely unrelated and so wildly different from each other, it often feels like you’re getting two books for the price of one, and the historical material features some top-shelf writing, so I don’t want to analyze it for so long that I start to appear ungrateful about it.

The big theme of the main present-day half revolves around a word I mentioned shortly above: cthia, mistranslated by none other than Amanda Grayson herself during the development of the universal translator as simply “logic” but more accurately rendered as “reality-truth”—i.e., the ability to look past how you want things to be and see them as they really are. It’s going to take more than anecdotal pleading to push the pendulum of secession back the other way. To get to the bottom of the reason Vulcans suddenly want to cut ties with the Federation, our classic trio is going to have to dig for the real truth. Okay, so it’s mostly Dr. McCoy that ends up doing the detective work. Nevertheless, the journey to the ultimate truth remains fascinating throughout.

The debates themselves, once they finally begin in earnest, are the best part of the book. It says a lot about the richness of these characters and the talents of Duane that 1) you can read pages upon pages of paragraphs of these folks just talking and talking and never once want to skip ahead and 2) that Kirk, a character renowned for his all-encompassing speechifying, gives, through no fault of Duane’s or his own, probably the least interesting speech.2 The debates are sort of the World Series of Logic, and watching each character hold their own against the madding crowd in their own distinctive ways is a delight.

In many ways, Spock’s World represents the apex of the Duanian mode. All her trademarks are present—her love affair with Irish and Welsh culture, her careful inclusion of multiple prominent non-hominid crew members, her irresistible urge to give Dr. McCoy at least one excellent moment of face-melting ownage, etc. If you can’t get enough of her style, this arguably is the most potent dose of it you can get in any single book.

Spock’s World was the first Star Trek novel to be printed in hardcover, and it spent eight weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. These honors, I feel, are logical: this book feels like the sort of licensed material you want representing the core of Trek on a worldwide scale. The phasers have been holstered; the only weapons here are words. At least for today, nobody’s trying to blow anything or anyone up or destroy the universe. They’re just trying to understand each other, striving to remind each other why and how their continued alliance works to the greater good. This is pure, distilled, Trek-style philosophizing and reasoning through problems at its finest. I am of course a completionist, but in truth only a very minuscule percentage of Trek novels are worth an unequivocal recommendation. Spock’s World is one such book, especially for anyone whose main Trek-related interest is Vulcans. Whatever you fancy, there’s bound to be something in this book you’re going to love.

MVP & LVP

  • It wouldn’t be a Diane Duane Trek story if the MVP wasn’t Dr. McCoy. Bones spends a fair amount of time leaning back with a smug look on his face, which might be annoying if he didn’t earn the indulgence several times over for his incredible detective work and skull-pulverizing owns.3 Of course, he’s not totally above-board in his methods, but how he would maintain that reputation for being a maverick if he didn’t? McCoy is obviously Duane’s favorite character to write, which dovetails nicely with the fact that that’s the character she writes best.
  • My choice for LVP this week is Alieth, one of the Vulcans in the story about the family that strikes it rich mining diamonds from asteroids. It’s kind of hard to wrap one’s mind around the concept of a Vulcan that’s addicted to video games, but she’s just as unpleasant as most human gamers. Maybe if she had survived the disaster, she could have started her own Twitch channel. Be sure to subscribe, comment, and smash that like button—it’s the logical thing to do!

Nuggets & Stray Bits

  • A concept not explored as much as cthia, though no less fully, is that of a’Tha, or immanence. Essentially, Vulcans are constantly directly plugged into the entity that created the universe and guides it, which can be more or less reasonably equated to the Terran idea of God. Religion is of course no new thing for sci-fi to tackle, but it’s always more interesting to me when authors in the genre engage and integrate with the idea of God rather than disavowing it and claiming society has outgrown it.
  • pp. 7–8: Having Spock store fresh coffee indefinitely by aborting in mid-transport and saving it in the data pattern is maybe the most Duane thing ever, and I am a hundred percent here for it.
  • p. 56: The Vulcan word for “idiot” derives from the concept of “one who fails to participate in civic duties”. Now there’s a rawhide thought bone to chew on.
  • p. 145: McCoy complains about the Mount Seleya snowglobes he found in a Vulcan gift shop, saying they’re the tackiest things he ever saw. Spock: “Yes, they were imported from Earth.” POW! Bones to Enterprise, one to beam up to the burn ward!
  • p. 360: I would be unforgivably remiss if I failed to recount the greatest Amanda Grayson moment in Star Trek history, canon or otherwise. After Sarek and Amanda get married, a newspaper runs with the headline “I Married a Little Green Man!” Amanda responds by saying in an interview, “There is nothing little about my husband.” Mic drop, nuclear explosion, boom, roasted, Worldstar, etc., 11 out of 10 universal translators, would marry again.

Final Assessment

Excellent. In many ways, Spock’s World represents one of the strongest cases for the most outstanding aspects of both its franchise and its author. What you’re getting here is peak, sleek Trek, with all of the good stuff and none of the warts. With the Vulcan history, it’s easy to feel like you’re getting a disproportionate amount of gravy to biscuits, but it’s never distracting or unwelcome. I wouldn’t hesitate to put this novel on a shortlist of tie-in books anyone who enjoys Star Trek even a little bit should read. An all-timer, without question.

NEXT TIME: Cursed is The Peacekeepers

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#049: The Peacekeepers (TNG #2)

5 Comments

  1. Brandon Harbeke

    I loved reading both Spock’s World and this review.

    • Lue

      So to offer a contrasting review, Vulcans and the philosophy are perhaps my favourite aspects of star trek but I downright hated this book. This was largely because of the structure- the historical sequences had no bearing on the overall plot and therefore were irrelevant and a waste of time that otherwise could have been crescendo to lead up to a somewhat decent denouement. Dr. McCoy gets all the action (why exactly? The stakes would be much higher if someone actually affected by this decision, ahem Spock, was racing to figure out what was motivating the secession) while Jim and Spock are tragically pointless in this. The anticlimatic conclusion with TPring was not very clever or fleshed out- which was Spock’s only involvement in the book and quite frankly made him look even more pointless and foolish. TPring seems to come out of no where with enough sexist sentiment to paint her as some sort of bizarre 1D villain whos mad at Spock because her husband choked on viagra. (Im sorry what) And they want the reader to believe Vulcans have basically identically base politics in comparison to humans- And we’re going to make the only racist characters Vulcans, when humanity is the one who needs to look in the mirror here?) This book actually makes me reluctant to read anything by Duane again and seems very overrated- I have never understood why people recommend it but just want to leave this here because I wish someone had mentioned these issues to me before I picked this book up.

  2. Maxie

    I’ve just finished reading this book, and I think your review is spot on. It’s great, the main storyline held my attention and I really wanted to find out how it would all resolve. And I love, love the chapters of Vulcan history! On a side note, I’d love to have a book of Surak’s teachings – they sound like great guidelines to live by. The whole casting out fear thing reminded me somewhat of the Dune Chronicles ‘fear is the mind killer’ bit; there must be something about desert planets that leads to that kind of philosophy 😉

  3. Adam Goss

    Addition to the Amanda Grayson greatness – the insult she makes to Sarek in the early days of their relationship, the one involving radio telescopes, such an insult that it actually makes Sarek *laugh* – honestly, he should marry that woman! 😉 I also find it ironic that the Vulcans seemed to have missed out on something big. Those giant subterranean beings that appeared to Surak, they emphasized JOY, not logic. And while logic certainly saved the Vulcan race from self-destruction, they threw the baby out with the bathwater. Those giant beings (I forget what they were called) remind me of something that Thorin says to Bilbo in his deathbed in The Hobbit: “If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.” Methinks that’s something the Vulcans still have not learned, for better or for worse.

  4. Mark A Boomer

    My all time favorite Trek novel. I read and re-read it constantly.

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