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 Mr. Scott's Guide To The Enterprise

On behalf of the 23rd century's own Miracle Worker, the author guides us through
external and internal schematics of the movie-era U.S.S. Enterprise, with a
travelogue of the more interesting destinations on every deck of the ship, set
photos where they exist, and illustrated guides to uniforms, weapons, landing
party equipment, and secondary spacecraft such as the Enterprise's shuttles and
work pods. An appendix brings the book up to date with Star Trek
IV: The Voyage Home.

An interesting hybrid of text and blueprint, Mr. Scott's Guide To The
Enterprise is a throwback to a different day and age in Star Trek publishing. At the time, the only
new adventures on the horizon were the movies, which appeared every two to three
years, and a two-hour action-adventure flick every couple of years or so seemed
unlikely to delve into the workings of the ship, so why not fill in the gaps a
bit?
Only, as we know, the phenomenal success of Star Trek
IV led to the gestation of Star
Trek's return to television - and this
meant that, for 26 weeks of every year for the next 18 years, new mythology was
bolted onto the Star Trek mythos at the rate of one or two hours per
week. And those adventures did delve into the workings of the
ship - granted, a different ship than the one on which this book focuses, but we
learned enough about warp drive and shields to know that, more or less, every
word of text in this book was invalidated by the time the fifth Star Trek movie
came out.
The pictorial reference material within these pages is still great stuff -
invalidated or not, no one has yet come out with a more comprehensive look at
the (fictional) workings of the most beautiful (fictional) starship to bear the
name "Enterprise" (at least for this reviewer's money). The blueprints and
floor plans are gold. Back in the day when I was into paper-and-dice
role-playing games, and had a regular weekly session of FASA's Star Trek RPG
going with some friends, this book got some serious use.
The text, however, is what has been banished to the "non-canonical" corner:
there's discussiion of Starfleet defense contractors submitting competing phaser
designs and photon torpedo designs. There's discussion about how the new
Enterprise 1701-A has a more streamlined and reliable version of Excelsior's
transwarp drive built into its nacelles. And there's discussion of how
that new Enterprise came to be, which contractors were involved (again!), giving
it the authentic ring of reading the history of some kind of a naval fleet...but
none of which is reflected in the body of "official" Star Trek lore. In a way,
it's not just a contextual cousin, but a spiritual cousin to Franz Joseph's
Star Trek Starfleet Technical Manual (1976), detailing the ships and
equipment of the 1960s TV-era Starfleet. In both cases...who could've possibly
known that more was on the way that would relegate each book's content to
"official" non-existence, even though quite a few of us fans swore by the
stuff?
Even after Star Trek: The Next Generation hit the air, author Shane Johnson
turned out another Star Trek non-fiction book, Worlds Of The Federation
(1988), detailing the member worlds and species of the United Federation of
Planets as of about midway through that series' second season. That, too, was
a role-playing gamer's treasure trove, and was also later ruled unofficial. In
1991, Trek non-fiction entered a whole new realm as the Next Generation Technical Manual debuted,
written and illustrated by the guys who actually worked on the show
itself. It didn't get much more offiicial than that, did it? Though
several illustrations for Mr. Scott's Guide were contributed by Andrew
Probert, who had actually worked on the design of the movie Enterprise, and the
updated reprint of the book showing display schematics from the 1701-A bridge
showed the backlit graphics designed by Mike Okuda himself. It's hard to set
Mr. Scott's Guide aside as completely unofficial.
Now that the voyages of another Enterprise
have been curtailed, and fans face the prospect of no new filmed Star Trek
adventures on TV or film for the first time in nearly two decades, it will be
interesting to see if this peculiar species of
not-quite-official-but-not-quite-unofficial Star Trek publishing returns.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com webmaster

This item is available in theLogBook.com's
Classic Star Trek Store.

- Year: 1984 (revised edition first printed in 1987)
- Author: Shane Johnson
- Genre: franchise science fiction
- Publisher: Pocket Books
- Pages: 128 pages
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