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Sunday, April 8, 2012

On the Coffee Table: Star Trek Ghosts

Even though ghosts begins with G, this is not my A-Z post. For that, please scroll down or try the link here.

Title: Star Trek: The Next Generation: Ghosts
Writer: Zander Cannon
Artist: Javier Aranda


Image via TrekMovie.com

Full disclosure: I went to college with Zander Cannon and am therefore predisposed to enjoy his work. I have written about him previously here. As I wrote in that post, most of his high-profile comics work has been as an artist but he has many writing credits as well - unusual for the industry. I thoroughly enjoyed this collected five-issue story and encourage you to give it a try as well. In hopes that you will, I'll save my spoilers for the end of the post. In the meantime, I have broader Star Trek matters to consider.

I've never called myself a Trekkie. In science fiction, my highest devotion is to Star Wars while I merely dabble in other idioms. That said, I've grown to admire Gene Roddenberry's magnificent creation over the years. It is the most thoroughly explored universe in American science fiction (still can't compete with Doctor Who worldwide). There is also, I have to admit, a lot more hard science in Star Trek than there is in Star Wars. Jules Verne and H.G. Wells would have been Trekkies.

I have devoted a fair amount of time to the Star Trek universe. I've watched every Next Generation episode and knocked off decent portions of the other series as well. I'd like to continue exploring but I'm not sure comic books are the likely avenue - at least, not yet. As much as I enjoyed Ghosts and appreciate the further development of characters I already know and like, I'd prefer to keep chipping away at the 726 television episodes between the six different series. All of them, including the old animated series, are currently available for instant viewing on Netflix so they're easier to watch than ever.


*****SPOILER ALERT!!!*****

The resolution of the story is dependent on the realization that the non-terrestrial race in question, the inhabitants of Allios IV, have six fingers on each hand and therefore use a base-12 number system. I love alternate number systems and was admittedly a sucker for this one but I still think it's exceedingly clever. I even checked back to panels earlier in the series to be sure the number of fingers was correct - they were, of course.

Zander's stories tend to be big on mythology - invented and otherwise. At one point, one of the Allios IV natives refer to the "gods below" as opposed to above. Why wouldn't a culture worship underground deities? Crops grow in soil. Water flows at ground level and below. Gravity's pretty cool. Why couldn't spiritual thinking be oriented down rather than up?

2 comments:

  1. I was a huge fan of TNG. Next on the list for me is Voyager, then DS9, but I lost it at the new Enterprise series and I haven't seen the recent film. The original series is like a peek into another era. I've read a couple of TNG novels but not any comics. I agree, the gods living underground idea is a good one. Nice post!

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  2. As a longtime Trek fan, I am going to check this out.

    I am trying to read all the A to Z blogs, but coming back to the ones I really like.
    Looking forward to seeing what you do all month!

    Tim
    The Other Side
    The Freedom of Nonbelief

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