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Collision Course (Star Trek: Academy)

Collision Course (Star Trek: Academy)
Authors: William Shatner, Judith Reeves-stevens, Garfield Reeves-stevens
Publisher: Star Trek

List Price: $25.00
Buy New: $9.79
You Save: $15.21 (61%)



New (5) Used (9) from $6.85

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 33 reviews

Format: Bargain Price
Media: Hardcover
Pages: 464
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.7 x 5.7 x 1.7

Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54

Publication Date: October 16, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new! Beautiful! May have a small remainder mark (ink mark) along the edge. gift quality, crisp, clean, multiple copies available, prompt shipping, excellent service.

Also Available In:

  › Hardcover - Collision Course (Star Trek: Academy)
  › Kindle Edition - Star Trek: The Academy: Collision Course
  › Library Binding - Collision Course (Star Trek)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
If you think you know how it all began, think again...

Young Jim Kirk wants nothing to do with Starfleet, andnever wants to leave Earth. In the summer of 2249, he's a headstrong seventeen-year-old barely scraping by in San Francisco, haunted by horrific memories from his past.

In the same city, a nineteen-year-old alien named Spock is determined to rise above the emotional turmoil of his mixed-species heritage. He's determined to show his parents he has what it takes to be Vulcan -- even if it means exposing a mysterious conspiracy at the heart of the Vulcan Embassy, stretching to the farthest reaches of the Federation's borders. There, a chilling new threat hasarisen to test the Federation's deepest held belief that war is a thing of the past and that a secure future can be forged through peaceful means alone. But it is in San Francisco, home to Starfleet Academy, where that threat will be met by two troubled teenage boys driven to solve the mystery that links them both.

In time, the universe will come to know these young rebels as Captain James T. Kirk and Mr. Spock...two of the Federation's greatest heroes. Yet before they were heroes, they were simply conflicted teenagers, filled with raw ambition and talent, not yet seasoned by wisdom and experience, searching for their own unique directions in life -- a destiny they'll discover on one fateful night in San Francisco, when two lives collide, and two legends are born.

Star Trek: Academy -- Collision Course sets the stage for an exciting new era of Star Trek adventure, and for the first time reveals Kirk and Spock as they were, and how they began their journey to become the Kirk and Spock we know today.


Customer Reviews:   Read 28 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars It answers one question anyway   December 4, 2008
R. L. MILLER (FT LAUDERDALE FL USA)
This book is mainly about the early friendship between Kirk and Spock in their Academy days. Kirk is mainly punk-sore at having been raised by a career Starfleet noncom, his father Joe Kirk, a spacefaring version of Conroy's Great Santini, which has shown him that the last thing he wants any part of is Starfleet. So what does he do but start dating an Academy cadet? He's more his brother's brother than his father's son anyway--big brother George has chosen as his personal form of rebellion to answer instead to his middle name Sam. Spock has his issues as well--he hasn't resolved the duality of his mixed human/ Vulcan heritage as yet. The two meet at a singles bar/ strip joint when Kirk slips the high-tech "slim jim" he used to steal a Starfleet vehicle after having programmed it with codes he stole from his cadet girlfriend into Spock's pocket. Nice guy, right? Gets his girl and a total stranger in trouble for the same offense. He's trying to expose an old acquaintance from the days of the Kodos massacre--remember Kodos? And so we revisit that old story sporadically to develop the interplay between those two. Now Kirk and Spock end up as "enlistees" in Starfleet in that old "either you're going into the service or to the pokey" choice of criminal penalties so often done with wayward youth of the 20th century. At this point I got this mental musical image of that old country song about washing my hands in muddy water but they didn't come clean. But you know what occurred to me before I even got that far? Now I possibly knew why any fan of Star Trek got labeled a "nerd" for a whole generation. Onetime SNL comedian Norm McDonald commented even before the "Enterprise" series even made it onto the air that it was only for nerds. The most widely-used definition of the term "nerd" has always been any person who has an enthusiasm for something that "cool" people (aka--cynics) couldn't care less about. But it goes a lot deeper than that, I fear. Star Trek has always carried "best-case scenario" to such an extreme that it gets confused with visionary thinking. Well into this story, for example, it is claimed that crime on Earth is by the time of this story obsolete. None of the things like harsh social and economic factors exist anymore, so why would there be hard-core crime? But here we've got James Kirk, embryonic intergalactic hero, with a massive contempt for "the rules", as if such things are irrelevant to him, to be defied or circumvented at one's will. To this younger Kirk, that old aphorism about law being the crystalized prejudice of the masses would make perfect sense, since he seems narcissistic enough to believe reality is what he says it is. That, more than rough conditions, is what breeds crime. The belief that you know everything and the rules are for suckers. I found myself waiting for him to accidentally meet (maybe at some hospital) a young medical resident from Georgia named Leonard McCoy, where he would get his first "dammit Jim". But he didn't. I think that's what makes followers of other entertainment or literature so contemptuous of us "trekkies". The unabashed naivete.


4 out of 5 stars Pretty Good Star Trek Adventure   November 25, 2008
Dean Brown (PA)
I really did like this book, especially the interaction between Kirk and Spock. Like others have mentioned, the ending is pretty difficult to swallow. But overall it was fast-paced and interesting.


3 out of 5 stars A lot of fun, but is this James T. Kirk?   September 21, 2008
Roger J. Buffington (Huntington Beach, CA United States)
I liked this novel a lot. For a quick "Star Trek" read involving our friends Kirk and Spock, this is about as good as these novels get. The author is a decent writer, and this book mostly avoids sappy sentiment. Spock's conflict with Sarek is well done and realistic. I am not so sure that I buy the author's interpretation of young James T. Kirk. Here, Kirk is portrayed as a very confused and conflicted young man, hard to reconcile with the Kirk that we know. On the other hand, the author's use of the Tarsus IV incident maybe explains this.

All in all, I enjoyed this more than I usually enjoy Star Trek novels. Trekkies (like me) will enjoy this one.



5 out of 5 stars What can I say? Shatner has his own view of Trek, but I like it!   September 2, 2008
Jeff Edwards (Twin Falls, Idaho)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

In the multi-faceted 'Shatnerverse' things happen sometimes different than within the same timeline already established with Trek Lore, including episodes and/or established novels written prior to his novels, but who CARES?? These are science fiction stories revolving around a TV series originally created by Gene Roddenberry a long time ago...let's not read into it what isn't there, okay? Heck, the series itself played around with established Trek Info at times, right? So what's the fuss? Sure, I'd LIKE it if ALL Trek media could agree 100% of the time, but since it doesn't, I'm not going to lose sleep over it, that's for sure. Okay, 'nuff said.

How was the book? you ask? Pretty good...whether or not that was Shatner's skill or the undeniable talent of co-authors Judith & Gar, well, let's say I have a feeling they have more of a part in helping to co-author these novels than Shatner would like us believe--but once again, I don't honestly care as long as the story is worth reading and provides me with sufficient entertainment that I'll feel buying the book was money well spent. In this case: absolutely well spent.

I was skeptical...at first, that fiddling with the origins of Kirk and Spock could be pulled off well enough to give this a positive rating, but indeed Shatner (or whoever else) did a fine job. The plot twists come (sometimes out of left field) and I am constantly impressed with the depth of Trek knowledge they display with each novel they all write together...and most importantly, how well that information is tied together with the new storyline.

For those who judge Shatner based on the abysmal Star Trek V film which was co-written and directed by Shatner--STOP right now...if you've read any of Shatner's non-fiction accounts of time on the set of the theatrical movies, well you know how frustrating filming Trek V was, and how ultimately the movie just plain sucked as a result of studio bickering and infighting--but that in NO way has influenced how fantastic Shatner's Trek Novels are. Some are better than others, but I have been entertained while reading them all. I add Collision Course to that list whole-heartedly. Begin with 'The Ashes of Eden' and work your way through, and I think the vast majority will be almost as surprised as I was at just how really GOOD those books are--and continue to be.

Just my .02...thanks for reading.



5 out of 5 stars Kirk and Spock   July 28, 2008
William C. Allen (Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX USA)
So far the best book that William Shatner has come out with, I've been impressed with his books since his teaming up with Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens. But this is by far the best. I've always wondered about how the two got into Starfleet and what it was like. I knew Spock's family was for a long time in disarray between father and son, but not for Kirk and his family. I look forward to the next!

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