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Ishmael (1985)

 Ishmael (1985)
type
TVTItem
 Ishmael (1985)
label
Ishmael (1985)
 Ishmael (1985)
page
Ishmael1985
 Ishmael (1985)
comment
Ishmael is a novel of the Star Trek Expanded Universe, written by Barbara Hambly and first published in 1985.Spock is transported back in time to the 1860s, where he loses his memory and is taken in by a man named Aaron Stemple, who dubs him "Ishmael". Stemple is the target of time-traveling Klingons who have identified him as the key figure in human history.The 1860s setting of the novel is inspired by the 1968-1970 historical TV series Here Come the Brides, the joke being that Aaron Stemple, who is implied in this novel to be one of Spock's ancestors on his human side, was played by Mark Lenard, who also played Spock's father in Star Trek: The Original Series. The novel is, however, written so that no knowledge of Here Come the Brides is necessary (and indeed doesn't explicitly mention the connection, since it was done without actually obtaining the rights to that series).Not to Be Confused with the philosophical novel Ishmael (1992).
 Ishmael (1985)
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 Ishmael (1985)
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2024-03-19T03:01:47Z
 Ishmael (1985)
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DBTropes
 Ishmael (1985) / int_1e669b8e
type
Humanoid Aliens
 Ishmael (1985) / int_1e669b8e
comment
Humanoid Aliens: Vulcans, Klingons, and Karsids are all described as being similar enough to humans to be easily disguised as them, but not so closely that a human paying attention might not notice something off. Which incidentally implies that the book ignores the 70s/80s Klingon redesigns from the movies.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_1e669b8e
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 Ishmael (1985) / int_1e669b8e
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 Ishmael (1985)
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Ishmael (1985) / int_1e669b8e
 Ishmael (1985) / int_3270a3d7
type
Low Culture, High Tech
 Ishmael (1985) / int_3270a3d7
comment
Low Culture, High Tech: This novel asserts that the Klingons were a primitive race who were conquered by starfarers called the Karsids. The Klingons, being Klingons, then defeated the Karsids and appropriated all their tech, giving them advanced tech despite still being culturally barbaric, a perfect object lesson in the worth of the Prime Directive.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_3270a3d7
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 Ishmael (1985) / int_3c0a4666
type
Noodle Incident
 Ishmael (1985) / int_3c0a4666
comment
Noodle Incident: How Spock escaped his Klingon captors is never explained, as Spock suffered from amnesia and the Klingons didn't stick around to explain. McCoy and Spock theorize that the Klingon torture left him in such a mental state that he was operating on pure (human) instinct.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_3c0a4666
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 Ishmael (1985)
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Ishmael (1985) / int_3c0a4666
 Ishmael (1985) / int_3c21649b
type
Chekhov's Time Travel
 Ishmael (1985) / int_3c21649b
comment
Chekhov's Time Travel: Spock travels back in time to explore the set of "Here Come the Brides" in Seattle, where he discovers that the Klingon are plotting to use time travel to kill one of his own ancestors — not to prevent him from being born, but because they were instrumental in another war. In addition, Spock is relatively amnesiac for most of the story and may have actually got another set of his predecessors together.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_3c21649b
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 Ishmael (1985) / int_48b9731f
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Paper-Thin Disguise
 Ishmael (1985) / int_48b9731f
comment
Paper-Thin Disguise: Spock's disguise, in the guise of Ishmael, consists mostly of growing his hair long enough to cover his ears and eyebrows. A human doctor is immediately able to sus him out while dancing with him, noticing that his skin was hot enough to the touch to suggest he should be delirious with fever, though this doesn't happen until long after she's had a chance to judge his character.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_48b9731f
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 Ishmael (1985) / int_5b351f0d
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IntercontinuityCrossover
 Ishmael (1985) / int_5b351f0d
comment
Intercontinuity Crossover: The novel is an extended crossover with the 1968-1970 ABC series Here Come the Brides, including several Mythology Gags spanning both series and a number of Shout Outs. Additionally, it features crossover cameo elements from Have Gun – Will Travel, Doctor Who, Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica, Bonanza, and Maverick. Notably, Hambly somehow got away with this despite most of those not being CBS or Paramount properties. It's not limited to screen crossovers, either; the cameo-filled bar scene at the beginning also includes a group of Hoka, and Stemple is mentioned at one point to be dealing with Struan's Trading Company.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_5b351f0d
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Ishmael (1985) / int_5b351f0d
 Ishmael (1985) / int_73733868
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Awesomeness by Analysis
 Ishmael (1985) / int_73733868
comment
Awesomeness by Analysis: Spock excels at pool without thinking about it, later commenting to a surprised onlooker that it is nothing but simple geometry and physics.
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Ishmael (1985) / int_73733868
 Ishmael (1985) / int_9cbf01d6
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Stay in the Kitchen
 Ishmael (1985) / int_9cbf01d6
comment
Stay in the Kitchen: At one point two characters have gone missing in the rainy Seattle woods and Spock suggests Biddie Cloom lend a hand in the search. "But she's a woman!" says Stemple. "What has her gender to do with her ability to locate missing persons?" asks Spock.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_9cbf01d6
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 Ishmael (1985)
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Ishmael (1985) / int_9cbf01d6
 Ishmael (1985) / int_9fd18130
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Animals Hate Him
 Ishmael (1985) / int_9fd18130
comment
Animals Hate Him: Aaron notices that while the town's cats are fascinated with "Ishmael", dogs really don't like him. They range from hostility to terror, but none actually tolerate him well.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_9fd18130
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Ishmael (1985) / int_9fd18130
 Ishmael (1985) / int_afc6df04
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What You Are in the Dark
 Ishmael (1985) / int_afc6df04
comment
What You Are in the Dark: The events of the story are largely set in motion when Aaron Stempel, who would be the last person to describe himself as a particularly charitable man, takes pity on a helpless, badly injured, and very possibly dangerous alien he finds in the woods a few miles outside of town.
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 Ishmael (1985) / int_b73bb03d
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Doppelgänger Crossover
 Ishmael (1985) / int_b73bb03d
comment
Doppelgänger Crossover: Spock meets Aaron Stempelnote Spelled "Stemple" here from Here Comes The Brides who Kirk later confirms is an ancestor of Spock's mother. Stempel was played by Mark Lenard who played Spock's father, Sarek in the Original Series of Star Trek.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_b73bb03d
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 Ishmael (1985) / int_e9e2c54d
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You Already Changed the Past
 Ishmael (1985) / int_e9e2c54d
comment
You Already Changed the Past: Due to the intervention of Spock and the Enterprise crew, all the Klingons end up doing is alerting their target that aliens exist and thereby creating the event they were trying to stop. It's implied that Spock's actions brought Stemple and Stemple's wife-to-be together and thereby created his own family history.
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 Ishmael (1985) / int_f364de89
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Make Wrong What Once Went Right
 Ishmael (1985) / int_f364de89
comment
Make Wrong What Once Went Right: The Klingons time-travel back to the 1800s to kill a man who prevented an alien empire from taking over the Earth.
 Ishmael (1985) / int_f364de89
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 Ishmael (1985) / int_ff7f34c5
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Pet the Dog
 Ishmael (1985) / int_ff7f34c5
comment
Pet the Dog: Aaron Stempel realizes that Spock isn't human, and is likely dangerous himself or will be sought after by those dangerous enough to have left him in his badly injured state in the woods. He takes pity on him and gives him shelter.
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Ishmael (1985)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Ishmael (1985)
hasFeature
Chekhov's Time Travel / int_59271d31