The Enterprise War (Q79468509)

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Literary work and Star Trek novel by John Jackson Miller
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English
The Enterprise War
Literary work and Star Trek novel by John Jackson Miller

    Statements

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    The Enterprise War (English)
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    The Enterprise War | Memory Alpha | Fandom (English)
    12 September 2021
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    October 2256
    1-26
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    Historians Note: The main events in this story begin in October 2256, five months after the Battle of the Binary Stars—and two years after the Enterprise’s first mission to Talos IV. (English)
    January 2257
    27-37
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    October 2257
    58-74
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    16
    The official date passing during his science team’s deployment, he had postponed the ship’s party until everyone’s return. The party had never happened. Instead, he belatedly rang in 2257 with funeral bells. (English)
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    23
    Colt had changed a lot from the green yeoman he used to know, but her devotion to him hadn’t altered in the slightest. (English)
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    The Enterprise War | Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki | Fandom (English)
    USS Enterprise personnel
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    43
    Robinson Crusoe had made two lists. Pike had never read the novel named for the character, and neither had most of his crew. As days dragged into weeks, however, the 1719 text—part of the complement of multiplanet cultural data preloaded into data slates aboard Enterprise—had seen a twenty-third-century revival. (English)
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    46
    “Galadjian looked down, self-effacing. “Two would have been of more help.” He shook his head. “No, the importance of this is all the time Ararat was on Armenia’s coat of arms, the mountain was in another country. It’s a dynastic memory, from a time when the map of the world was different. It was aspirational,” he added. “A dream.” (English)
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    46
    “I am an old man, Christopher. But when I was young, I grew up in Armenia. Under all the governments it ever had, the national symbol was a mountain. Ararat.”Pike knew of it. “Where Noah parked his boat.” “Ah, you know the story. I sometimes feel we are in an ark now.” (English)
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    41
    “We’re onto the Flying Dutchman,” she said. “I was mentioning that one of the early descriptions of it was in A Voyage to Botany Bay from 1795. It was a ghost ship.” (English)
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    53
    “Yeah. I could see Spock not wanting us judging his condition by analyzing his vitals.” “That was the big one for Jim Lovell, according to his book.” (English)
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    73
    “No, this was the author’s follow-up,” he said, handing it to Baladon. “The Life, Adventures, and Pyracies of the Famous Captain Singleton.” “A pirate?” “Who had enough of the life, and went straight and settled down. That’s still the plan, isn’t it?” (English)
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    74
    From past attempts at conversations, he knew that Spock had been trying—intentionally or not—to retrace his life from his exile on Skon’s World, including reading things he had read during that time. But this, Pike saw, was a later Defoe work. “A Journal of the Plague Year. Didn’t we just live through that?” (English)
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    42
    He knew nothing of Una and his engineers, nor of his kidnapped scientists. Had he really seen a Vulcan salute during the battle? It seemed so hazy now. (English)
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    Historians Note: The main events in this story begin in October 2256, five months after the Battle of the Binary Stars—and two years after the Enterprise’s first mission to Talos IV. (English)
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    49
    It baffled Connolly that so many starships wandered into the Pergamum, given the reputation of the place—but the phenomenon was familiar. People still wandered into the Delphic Expanse even though they knew better. (English)
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    Historians Note: The main events in this story begin in October 2256, five months after the Battle of the Binary Stars—and two years after the Enterprise’s first mission to Talos IV. (English)
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    53
    “Adopted by Sarek,” Spock said. “He said… he expected us to be… friends.”“Right,” Pike said, having definitely remembered. “You two did good work at Sirsa III.” (English)
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    The adjective was apt. The colossal astronomical body known on deck just as the Pergamum was named for the city that held Satan’s throne in the Book of Revelation. (English)
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    16
    For those aboard a starship, the turn of the new year was a strange thing. Alongside stardates, the calendar year had continued to be used as a marker for many things having nothing to do with the length of the planet Earth’s revolutions around its sun. (English)
    Pergamum Nebula
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