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===Science and technology=== |
===Science and technology=== |
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− | :[[alpha wave]] • [[communicator]] • [[computer|computer terminal]] • [[neuron|cortical neuron]]s • [[delta wave]] • [[sensor|heat scan]] • [[suspended animation|hypersleep chamber]] • [[warp|hyperlight]] • [[impulse engine]] • [[missile]] • [[nuclear weapon]] • [[orbital weapon platform]] • [[photon torpedo]] • [[spacecraft|pre-warp spacecraft]] • [[radiation]] • [[radio]] • [[robot]] • [[rocket]] • [[stardate]] • [[thruster]] • [[environmental suit|thruster suit]] • [[tractor beam]] • [[transporter]] • [[warp engine]] • [[communicator|wrist communicator]] |
+ | :[[alpha wave]] • [[communicator]] • [[computer|computer terminal]] • [[neuron|cortical neuron]]s • [[delta wave]] • [[sensor|heat scan]] • [[suspended animation|hypersleep chamber]] • [[warp speed|hyperlight]] • [[impulse engine]] • [[missile]] • [[nuclear weapon]] • [[orbital weapon platform]] • [[photon torpedo]] • [[spacecraft|pre-warp spacecraft]] • [[radiation]] • [[radio]] • [[robot]] • [[rocket]] • [[stardate]] • [[thruster]] • [[environmental suit|thruster suit]] • [[tractor beam]] • [[transporter]] • [[warp engine]] • [[communicator|wrist communicator]] |
===Ranks and titles=== |
===Ranks and titles=== |
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===Related stories=== |
===Related stories=== |
||
* {{m|TOS|The Motion Picture}} – Described the [[starship]] refit, crew changes, and [[technology]] updates that occurred prior to the events of this story. |
* {{m|TOS|The Motion Picture}} – Described the [[starship]] refit, crew changes, and [[technology]] updates that occurred prior to the events of this story. |
||
− | * {{e|TOS|The Paradise Syndrome}} – A |
+ | * {{e|TOS|The Paradise Syndrome}} – A {{dis|Preserver|race}}-seeded [[Native American]] [[colony]] on [[Amerind]] was threatened by an [[asteroid]]. |
* {{c|TOS|Aberration on Abaris}} – A [[landing party]] rescues the survivors of a lost [[civilization]] on [[Abaris]]. |
* {{c|TOS|Aberration on Abaris}} – A [[landing party]] rescues the survivors of a lost [[civilization]] on [[Abaris]]. |
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* The [[Washington, D.C.]] premiere of {{m|TOS|The Motion Picture}} took place four days after the debut of the [[comic strip]]. The film premiered nationwide one day later. |
* The [[Washington, D.C.]] premiere of {{m|TOS|The Motion Picture}} took place four days after the debut of the [[comic strip]]. The film premiered nationwide one day later. |
||
− | * Consisting of 42 daily [[comic strip]]s, "Coming Home" was the first serialized ''Star Trek'' story published in the [[United States]]. [[Marvel Comics]] published their [[Star Trek: The Motion Picture (adaptation)]] on December 4, 1979, in [[Marvel Super Special, Issue 15]]. It was serialized over three issues, starting with [[The Motion Picture (comic)|#1]], which was released on January 1, [[1980]] with a cover date of April 1980. ({{ |
+ | * Consisting of 42 daily [[comic strip]]s, "Coming Home" was the first serialized ''Star Trek'' story published in the [[United States]]. [[Marvel Comics]] published their [[Star Trek: The Motion Picture (adaptation)]] on December 4, 1979, in [[Marvel Super Special, Issue 15]]. It was serialized over three issues, starting with [[The Motion Picture (comic)|#1]], which was released on January 1, [[1980]] with a cover date of April 1980. ({{marvel|Star Trek Vol 1 1}}) |
* The Sunday strips were printed in color, whereas the Monday through Saturday strips were printed in black and white (b/w). This was not the first ''Star Trek'' story to appear both in color and b/w, however. Published in [[Great Britain]] in [[1970]], {{c|TOS|UK comic strips, eleventh story arc}} began in color and ended with a b/w spread. |
* The Sunday strips were printed in color, whereas the Monday through Saturday strips were printed in black and white (b/w). This was not the first ''Star Trek'' story to appear both in color and b/w, however. Published in [[Great Britain]] in [[1970]], {{c|TOS|UK comic strips, eleventh story arc}} began in color and ended with a b/w spread. |
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File:LA1-Survivors.jpg|Toltan Colony Astronauts |
File:LA1-Survivors.jpg|Toltan Colony Astronauts |
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File:LA1-Desperation.jpg|Resisting a tractor beam |
File:LA1-Desperation.jpg|Resisting a tractor beam |
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+ | LA1-opener.jpg |
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</gallery> |
</gallery> |
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===External links=== |
===External links=== |
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* {{memoryalpha}} |
* {{memoryalpha}} |
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− | * {{memoryalpha|Thomas Warkentin|Thomas Warkentin}} |
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− | * {{wikia-marvel|Star Trek Vol 1 1}} |
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− | |||
[[Category:TOS comics]] |
[[Category:TOS comics]] |
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[[Category:Comic strips]] |
[[Category:Comic strips]] |
Revision as of 21:31, 8 November 2019
Called Home is a Star Trek: The Original Series comic strip. It is the first story in the US Comic Strips series, published by the Los Angeles Times Syndicate beginning in 1979. The story was set after TOS movie: The Motion Picture, depicting events from Captain Kirk's second five-year mission aboard the refurbished USS Enterprise (NCC-1701).
In this story, written and drawn by Thomas Warkentin, the Enterprise investigates a distress call sent from the moon of a long-dead world.
Publisher's Information
- From the Syndicate sales kit sent to newspaper editors in 1979 (reprinted in The Newspaper Comics, Volume 1)
- Star Trek, the Legend, is now Star Trek, the Comic Strip. Join the crew of the U.S. Starship Enterprise [sic] in its mission to explore strange new worlds and seek out new life and civilizations. Your readers now can participate in the adventures of Captain Kirk, Spock, "Scotty," "Bones," Sulu, Chekov, Lieutenant Uhura and the bald and beautiful new female navigator, ilia, every day plus Sundays in this fascinating comic strip.
- Star Trek, its characters and its stars, have inspired 371 fan clubs and almost weekly conventions drawing up to 20,000 people in cities throughout the country. The "Trekkie" phenomenon has spawned more than 50 books, 400 fan publications and several masters and doctoral theses. Readers of all ages love Star Trek and will follow its comic strip adventures through uncharted space with fervor.
- The Star Trek comic strip will be the beneficiary of the massive promotion accompanying the release of the new Star Trek motion picture. The comic strip will run in eight-week sequences. The story line will be the same for both the daily and the Sunday strips with an expansion of the plot on Sundays. However, both the daily and the Sunday strips can stand alone effectively.
- The artist, Thomas Warkentin, a lifelong science fiction fan with an impressive list of credits to his name, will be producing both the art and the stories. Not only is he a superb draftsman, but his cliffhanging plots leave you thirsting for more. We know this fabulous new comic strip is a sure-fire winner. Launch Star Trek in your newspaper and, as Kirk says, "boldly go where no man has gone before.
Summary
- Captain's Log: Stardate 7493.5
- On a survey mission through an uncharted sector of the galaxy, we have picked up a radio transmission from an unexplored sun system.
- Stardate 7493.9
- As the Enterprise enters parking orbit, the radio signal fades. Sensors reveal astonishing devastation... Evidence of planet-wide nuclear war, centuries before.
- Captain's Log: Stardate 7493.9
- We are responding to a verbal radio transmission emanating from the moon of a planet devastated by nuclear war centuries before. The message consists of the word "come," repeated in a language our computer identifies as Toltan, the speech of an ancient race.
- Captain's Log: Stardate 7494.0
- Unable to pinpoint the source of a radio signal emanating from the moon of a devastated planet, First Officer Spock, Doctor McCoy and I have beamed to a centuries-old spacecraft on the surface.
- Captain's Log: Stardate 7494.1
- Chief Engineer Scott recording. Captain Kirk, Science Officer Spock and Doctor McCoy are on the moon of a devastated planet to investigate a radio signal of unknown origin. The captain has ordered a security team standing by.
Investigating the spacecraft on the surface in thruster suits, Kirk, Spock and McCoy determined that a hole in the ship was caused by a meteor after it had safely landed 900 years earlier. A hatch had been left open, revealing two sets of footprints, which dead-ended at a set of tread-prints. Nyota Uhura located the exact source of the radio transmission, a robot crawler vehicle which appeared over the rim of an impact crater, creating the tread-print pattern the landing party had been following. Suddenly it placed an energy field around the three people, paralyzing them while they heard in their minds messages of peace and love. Gently, robot tentacles gathered up the landing party and carried them down a corridor hidden below a boulder into a vast underground complex. They saw two humanoids in spacesuits at the end of a long corridor of hypersleep chambers, and were deposited gently into the next three chambers.
- Excerpt from Captain's Log: Stardate 7494.2
- Inside the hypersleep chambers, our paralysis began to fade as we were subjected to a soporific vibration which, according to Spock, induces sleep by altering the electrical period of the cortical neurons. After Doctor McCoy and I had yielded to sleep, Spock used Vulcan mind-control to enhance his alpha state and suppress theta activity, remaining awake long enough to reach his communicator and have us, including the little aliens, beamed aboard the Enterprise.
Sensors showed the moon to be artificial, mostly hollow with a neutronium hull. In sickbay, McCoy and Christine Chapel revived the two aliens, who explained to Kirk that their world was threatened by nuclear war, so they'd gone to their moon to use it as an orbital weapon platform to "enforce planet-wide peace." Their race believed their moon to be a spacecraft guided by "the gods."
Suddenly the Toltan Moon grabbed the Enterprise with a tractor beam and began dragging the ship toward a large opening on the surface.
- Captain's Log: Stardate 7494.3
- We are caught in a tractor beam pulling us toward the moon.
Captain's Log: Supplemental Entry
- With warp and impulse engines at maximum, we are still in the grip of the tractor beam.
After accessing its data banks, Spock discovered that the aliens were one of many Toltan colony worlds that were seeded long ago, left to evolve, watched over by sentinel Toltan Moons that were programmed to return "home" with those who had achieved a moon landing. Although he was unable to ascertain why the Toltan Moon didn't depart 900 years ago, Spock said, "its program calls for it to return now. And we are preventing it from completing its mission." He added, "It wants those little astronauts, Captain... with or without us."
Kirk considered firing torpedoes, but the aliens proposed a different solution. Having been told that their world had been destroyed by nuclear weapons 900 years earlier, they insisted on being returned to the moon, which they believed was a "sacred vehicle that will carry them to a paradise." The two aliens were transported back into their hypersleep chambers. The Toltan Moon immediately disengaged its tractor beam, then left the orbit of its planet, carrying its two passengers "home".
References
Characters
- Christine Chapel • Pavel Chekov • Ilia • James T. Kirk • Leonard McCoy • Janice Rand • Montgomery Scott • Spock • Hikaru Sulu • Nyota Uhura • unnamed Toltans
Starships and vehicles
Locations
- Toltan Moon
- Referenced only
- Toltan Colony
Races and cultures
States and organizations
Science and technology
- alpha wave • communicator • computer terminal • cortical neurons • delta wave • heat scan • hypersleep chamber • hyperlight • impulse engine • missile • nuclear weapon • orbital weapon platform • photon torpedo • pre-warp spacecraft • radiation • radio • robot • rocket • stardate • thruster • thruster suit • tractor beam • transporter • warp engine • wrist communicator
Ranks and titles
- captain • chief engineer • doctor • lieutenant • Federation Starfleet ranks (2270s) • science officer
Other references
- antimatter • bridge • century • galaxy • heart • humanoid • crater • landing party • language • organic life • meteor • meter • molecule • moon • neutronium • parking orbit • planet • proximity explosion • radio signal • sector • security team • sickbay • Starfleet uniform (early 2270s) • sun system • thought transmissions • transporter room
Timeline
Published Order | ||
---|---|---|
Previous comic: First Comic |
Star Trek: The Original Series (US Comic Strips) |
Next comic: #2: “Dilithium Dilemma” |
Previous story: First Work |
Stories by: Thomas Warkentin |
Next story: "Dilithium Dilemma" |
Chronological Order | ||
Previous adventure: "Star Trek: Infestation, Issue 2" |
Memory Beta Chronology | Next adventure: "Dilithium Dilemma" |
Appendices
Related stories
- TOS movie: The Motion Picture – Described the starship refit, crew changes, and technology updates that occurred prior to the events of this story.
- TOS episode: "The Paradise Syndrome" – A Preserver-seeded Native American colony on Amerind was threatened by an asteroid.
- TOS comic: "Aberration on Abaris" – A landing party rescues the survivors of a lost civilization on Abaris.
Information
- The Washington, D.C. premiere of TOS movie: The Motion Picture took place four days after the debut of the comic strip. The film premiered nationwide one day later.
- Consisting of 42 daily comic strips, "Coming Home" was the first serialized Star Trek story published in the United States. Marvel Comics published their Star Trek: The Motion Picture (adaptation) on December 4, 1979, in Marvel Super Special, Issue 15. It was serialized over three issues, starting with #1, which was released on January 1, 1980 with a cover date of April 1980. (Star Trek Vol 1 1 article at the Marvel Database)
- The Sunday strips were printed in color, whereas the Monday through Saturday strips were printed in black and white (b/w). This was not the first Star Trek story to appear both in color and b/w, however. Published in Great Britain in 1970, TOS comic: "UK comic strips, eleventh story arc" began in color and ended with a b/w spread.
- This is the first of 13 stories set after the events of TOS movie: The Motion Picture with the crew wearing the Starfleet uniform (early 2270s). Five stories were set in 2273, followed by eight in 2274.
- Events continued directly into the next story, "Dilithium Dilemma". The struggle against the Toltan Moon's tractor beam had fused most of the starship's dilithium, leaving the Enterprise stranded.
- An inadvertent continuity error occurred when Warkentin depicted Ilia at the navigator's station in panels published on Sunday, December 2, 1979, and Wednesday, January 9, 1980. The first panel was reprinted on the cover of The Newspaper Comics, Volume 1, and they were also reprinted on pages 14 and 28 of that omnibus. Why did she appear in this story, when she had died in TOS movie: The Motion Picture? The story was produced prior to the release of the film. In a podcast, it was explained that Warkentin was provided with stills from the film, including shots of an interesting-looking bald character at the navigator's station. He didn't know that this navigator was the Ilia character. And according to ST reference: New Life and New Civilizations: Exploring Star Trek Comics, Warkentin didn't know Ilia's fate until he saw the movie on opening night. Additionally, Ilia was marketed as a recurring character in the strip, in an ad that was reprinted in the omnibus.
- This story arc was not printed with a title. The title was provided from Warkentin's original script by his widow, Rosie Warkentin Ford, for the story's reprinting in The Newspaper Comics, Volume 1. (ST reference: New Life and New Civilizations: Exploring Star Trek Comics).
- The image of the USS Enterprise in the December 3, 1979 strip was a reproduction of the Enterprise from posters in its Star Trek: Phase II configuration.
- Ancient astronauts were a popular topic in the 1970s, so the idea of seeded Toltan colonies was timely.
Images
External links
- Called Home article at Memory Alpha, the wiki for canon Star Trek.