#190: Possession (TNG #40)

This week, a malevolent evil has returned, and this time, it’s learned how to meditate. But if Data, Worf, and Deanna can’t build a proton pack that will hold it, it’ll turn the upcoming science fair into the ultimate superspreader event. How many Earth expressions is Worf actually familiar with? How much of J.M. Dillard’s touch is really in this book? And is the redshirt death in this book the most senseless one yet? All this and more in Possession, the book that leaves ’em laughing.

Possession
Authors: J.M. Dillard, Kathleen O’Malley
Pages: 281
Published: May 1996
Timeline: Between “Attached” (S7E8) and “Force of Nature” (S7E9)
Prerequisites: You would think Demons (TOS #30) would be one, but it informs way less of this book than expected

Way back in the earliest days of this site, which covered the early 80s when TOS was the only game in town and it was nothing but TOS novels for almost an entire calendar year, one of the books from that time was a novel called Demons, the sophomore effort of a spunky young writer named Jeanne Kalogridis, better known to legions of Trek readers as J.M. Dillard. Demons was, as I recall, not great: the mind parasites were somewhat ill-defined, Spock had a protégé that was made out to be one of those annoying original characters who shows up for their first day of work and is already better at all the senior officers’ jobs than they are but actually turned out to be some undercover agent, and Dr. McCoy spent most of the book being a literal burden. Demons is my lowest-ranked Dillard novel to date, so I find the choice to revisit that one in particular a little peculiar. Maybe she was just really sentimental about it.

Actually, on paper, it isn’t the worst idea. The Next Generation gang’s approach to problems is different enough from the TOS crew’s to easily justify a new story with the same premise. Unfortunately, what wound up happening was that this story was also bad, just in different ways. Dillard was assisted here by Kathleen O’Malley, a close friend and writing partner of Ann Crispin, and from the few terse and unrevealing comments Dillard has made that I could find, it seems like O’Malley carried the significant majority of the weight on this one. Dillard says in Voyages of Imagination simply that revisiting Demons in TNG seemed like it would be fun and was, and in the book’s acknowledgments mentions only that O’Malley “came to [her] rescue during a very difficult year.” Between that and the writing style, it seems to me Dillard didn’t actually have a whole lot to do with this book, and if that is the case, it certainly shows.

This time, the superspreader is Skel, a Vulcan who’s been studying the parasites since their return to dormancy eighty years prior. Skel has a powerful personal connection to the parasites, having had a traumatic experience with them as a child where his father got infected and killed his mother. Her katra still lives inside him, acting as a kind of Vulcan Spidey sense, and she also serves other psi-friendly folks in the same capacity throughout the story. It’s not quick enough, however, to warn him away from getting kidnapped by a scheming Ferengi DaiMon and his decidedly less enthusiastic brother. Unfortunately for those two, the parasites have also been shacking up in Skel’s head since that fateful night, and they’ve learned a thing or two about Vulcan control and patience in that time. Now, at last, they see their opportunity to branch out, and that opportunity is the TechnoFair, a science expo featuring representatives from a staggering number of Federation member races, many of whom are being transported by the Enterprise.

This is the kind of book where any character being even a little bit less credulous at any point would have gone a long way. Instead, they let Skel out of quarantine just because his vitals check out, at which point he proceeds to gaze into the eyes of everyone he can and spread the infection. Even several senior officers succumb, although Picard puts up a valiant fight. Eventually, only Data, Deanna, Worf, Alexander, and a scientist attending the TechnoFair named Kyla Dannelke are left to fend off the infected hordes and figure out a way to trap the malevolent spirits. If they can’t, the TechnoFair will go down in history for much different and worse reasons than anticipated.

Although Possession is a direct sequel to Demons, it goes out of its way to avoid any kind of direct textual link to its predecessor. It wasn’t that long before this that the prospect of sequels to original material was completely off the table; perhaps this was a test of the waters enabled by Dillard’s clout. Whatever the case, you aren’t missing anything if you haven’t read Demons, which is at least a win for accessibility. In fact, it’s actually probably better if you haven’t, since if you have, the reluctance to talk about specific characters and events from it can prove somewhat maddening. The nature of the infecting spirits remains as vague as ever as well, outside of some speculation about their use as a biologial weapon, so if you read Demons and you’re hoping Possession will enrich its lore, keep hoping.

In addition to being a peculiar book, Possession is also a rather amateurishly written one. We’ll talk more about how thoroughly it abandons some plot points in a more apropos part of the review, but there are other problems too. An excess of exclamation marks serves to ironically undermine the excitement, and there are a lot of moments that make you wonder if the authors have ever even watched the show they’re writing about. Most of these involve Worf in some way. He and Alexander have a far less adversarial relationship here, which you would think would be a nice change from the norm, but instead somehow feels plain wrong. There’s also no mention of his fledgling relationship with Counselor Troi, which is odd for a story set in season seven. Instead, he’s got a thing with Dr. Dannelke that is so chaste, it’s practically nonexistent.

I did get one big laugh out of this book. It came at the very end, when it has the audacity to cap things off with a tease for another sequel. No thank you, check please. Two of these is quite enough. I’m pretty bummed that Possession failed to capitalize on the significant room it had to improve, but if two books can’t produce something good from this premise, I doubt a third one would have.

MVP & LVP

  • My MVP this week is Nabon, DaiMon Dervin’s brother. He’s very level-headed about the danger of the artifacts, and even though his attempt to stop the infection from reaching the Enterprise is too little, too late, I really admired his effort. Even Skel compliments his reasoning abilities. Good Ferengi in TNG are as rare as latinum. Treasure them.
  • My LVP this week is Dr. George Tarmud, one of Skel’s primary associates and essentially an avatar for one of the book’s most sloppily handled and hastily abandoned subplots. Possession opens with the death of an ensign named Janice Ito, a death made all the more tragic by the fact that it was extremely preventable. Tarmud’s work, in which he’s trying to make an android that can house a living being’s engrams, opens some fresh wounds and mortally offends more than a few senior officers’ fundamental sensibilities. But this thread gets shoved aside so hard and so fast to make way for the main plot that Ito’s death becomes entirely pointless as Dr. Tarmud gets relegated to nothing more than a visual indicator of how the infection drives humans wild more easily than it does Vulcans. There are some wasted ideas in Possession, but none as much as Dr. Tarmud’s quest to defy death and what it could have meant for Ensign Ito. It feels like it belongs in another book entirely.

Stray Bits

  • “But still Geordi fought, still he resisted the invasion of his most private organ…”
    Top 30 Vince Mcmahon GIFs | Find the best GIF on Gfycat
    “…his brain.”
    Bleacher Report
    (p. 143)
  • “Worf’s brow furrowed at the unfamiliar colloquialism. Why would a Klingon want to bark at any tree.” — This one really toes a line. Is the phrase really that unfamiliar? Worf wasn’t raised on Earth, but he was raised by parents who were from Earth. But they were Eastern European, and maybe it’s not such a familiar phrase in those parts? But he went to the Academy on Earth, with a bunch of humans raised on Earth, and he’s served on starships with plenty of humans as well. Hard to say. I think ultimately I disagree with the line. He’s had to have heard it at least once. Right? (p. 195)

Final Assessment

Bad. As a direct sequel to the TOS novel Demons, Possession fails to make the most of the ample opportunity that not-very-good book provided to enhance the concept and deepen the lore, and turns out not very good itself in the process. There are also some gaping holes in its knowledge of basic character dynamics that make it difficult to take seriously. Due to some undefined confluence of external pressures, I suspect Dillard wasn’t able to contribute much of her strong writer’s voice to this one. Her name may be on the cover, but evidence of her talents is tough to come by inside.

NEXT TIME: A subjective review of Objective: Bajor

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1 Comment

  1. Adam Goss

    I liked Demons, but I read it back in the late 80s when I was a teenager, so no idea if it would hold up for me on a re-read. I DID try reading Possession, though, just a couple years ago or so. I was turned off by something about the writing before I could even finish the first chapter and abandoned it. I cannot say now what it was that bugged me, not sure I could say then either. I just know it didn’t work for me. Might very well be due to an unfamiliar author carrying the load, like Gentry Lee doing the bulk of the writing on those wretched sequels to Arthur C. Clarke’s Rendezvous With Rama. (Not saying O’Malley is a bad writer, necessarily, I’ve never even heard of her outside of Possession, but maybe this was a first-time effort for her? Or maybe this was not a good story for her to be working on, not every author is suited to tell every story.)

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