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The last gasp of a dying star! — "Death of a Star" was a Star Trek: The Original Series comic book story published by Gold Key Comics in 1975. It was the 30th issue of their TOS series of comics, the first of two stories written by Allan Moniz and the 27th drawn by Alberto Giolitti. In this story, the USS Enterprise expected to watch a star go nova, but instead discovered a mysterious old woman on the star’s third planet.

Description[]

Trapped on a veritable keg of cosmic dynamite, Captain Kirk and the Star Trek crew become the unwilling captive audience to the most shattering spectacle in all the galaxy: a star going nova! But the natural cataclysm takes on tragic overtones when a mysterious old woman's life is mystically linked to… a strange cosmic force!

Summary[]

Captain's log, star date 33:33.3. Our mission is to study and record, from a safe distance, the final death throe of the star Isis. According to our calculations, this gem of space has only 48 hours before it explodes, destroying everything for billions upon billions of cubic miles! Fortunately, its star system is uninhabited!

Hikaru Sulu suddenly picked up lifeform readings on Isis III, as if an entire planet's population were in one spot. James T. Kirk beamed down to investigate along with Nyota Uhura, Christine Chapel and Spock. They discovered an old woman awaiting them inside a Mayan-style pyramid temple. Kirk offered to save her from the impending nova, but she identified herself as Isis, god of the sun. Thinking she was abandoned or insane, the landing party set out to find the missing planet's inhabitants, but the jungle path they'd followed had filled in, their phasers were drained, and solar flares cut off communications with the ship, leaving them stranded near the temple.

Captain's log, supplemental: While the Enterprise orbits helplessly overhead, due to interference from the near-nova sun, we are marked for doom! Our desperate search for Isis III's mysterious inhabitants has only led us to a strange old woman! But now I have a more immediate concern than saving the lives of the inhabitants — namely, saving the lives of the crew and myself!

Kirk and Spock found a hidden entrance under the temple, eventually locating record tapes revealing that the Isisian civilization became extinct 25 million years ago. Meanwhile, Uhura and Chapel spent time with Isis, gaining an empathy for the woman's dignity and right to die. When Spock asked her to explain some of her statements, Isis replied that Spock's logic was a cage that should be opened. She began to mind meld with Spock, but at that moment, she began glowing. She immediately sent the landing party back to the Enterprise, and then the star exploded. The ship buffeted, guided by unseen forces through the eye of the storm, and survived the blast.

Based on what he saw during his mind meld, Spock said that the Isis entity appeared to have been a human personification of the living star, created so it could talk to them before it died.

References[]

Characters[]

Christine ChapelIsisJames T. KirkLeonard McCoyMontgomery ScottSpockHikaru SuluNyota Uhura

Starships and vehicles[]

USS Enterprise (Constitution-class heavy cruiser)

Locations[]

Isis (star)Isis III

Races and cultures[]

HumanIsisianVulcan

States and organizations[]

FederationStarfleet (command divisionoperations divisionsciences division)

Science and technology[]

atmospherecityclass Mphaserprobesensorsunsunstrokestartransportertapetransportertricorderviewscreen

Ranks and titles[]

captainFederation Starfleet ranks (2260s)lieutenantnurserankStarfleet ranks

Other references[]

airplaneassignment patchatmospherebeamcommunicationselectricityextinctiongalaxygodhourhumanoidhurricanelifeformlightninglogic25 million years agomind meldminutemovienovapyramidreligionsolar flarespaceStarfleet uniformStarfleet uniform (2265-2270)suicidesuntemplethird planetswarpwarp eightwarp fourwateryear

Appendices[]

Related stories[]

Background[]

  • The story was released during a period of worldwide interest in ancient Egyptian culture. Artifacts from King Tutankhamun's tomb were on display throughout the world in the 1970s, particularly in Britain from 1972-1979 and in New York from 1976-1979.
  • The story was published four months prior to the debut of “The Secrets of Isis” TV series in September, 1975.
  • Kirk, Spock and McCoy visited the Great Pyramid at Giza in TOS comic: "Prophet of Peace".
  • The ancient Egyptian goddess Isis was goddess of the afterlife, the elements and the sky. Her powers were said to be the strongest of all the Egyptian gods.
  • The sacred star of Isis was Sirius, considered to be a physical manifestation of the goddess.
  • It was unclear whether the entity Isis was the actual Earth goddess from Egyptian mythology. While Uhura and Spock seemed to think she was, Kirk did not. She said she was the god of the sun, but only appeared connected to the star Isis. She did not describe any interaction with Earth’s past. Neither her temple, manifestations, nor the Isisian city appeared Egyptian. The headpiece she wore was not that of the Egyptian Isis. Sirius, the star associated with Egyptian Isis, was a binary star, whereas the star which went nova was a lone star. And that moment for her which encompassed the last 25 million years would have included all of recorded human history, including the time of ancient Egypt. If she was the Egyptian Isis, then she was an entity capable of living within or traveling between multiple stars and possibly experienced time in some non-linear way.
  • The Isisian’s temple resembled the stepped pyramids of ancient Mayan Earth culture, rather than those of ancient Egypt, particularly as influenced by Kukulkan in TAS episode & Log Six novelization: How Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth.
  • It was unclear whether the star itself was alive. Sensors observed the star for 24 hours, but no mention was made of life readings within the star or other evidence that it was alive. The only life readings within the system came from the temple on the surface of Isis III.
  • Spock’s mind meld with the cosmic entity, in which he saw wonderment and “inconceivable things,” presaged similar wonder from his meld with V'Ger in TOS movie: The Motion Picture.
  • This story has been released seven times in English and translated into Dutch, German, and Italian.

Images[]

Chronology[]

25 million years ago
Isisian society dies off
2267 (stardate 3333.3)
Star Isis goes nova

Connections[]

Gold Key Comics stories and publications
Issues "The Planet of No Return" • "The Devil's Isle of Space" • "Invasion of the City Builders" • "The Peril of Planet Quick Change" • "The Ghost Planet" • "When Planets Collide" • "The Voodoo Planet" • "The Youth Trap" • "The Legacy of Lazarus" • "Sceptre of the Sun" • "The Brain Shockers" • "The Flight of the Buccaneer" • "Dark Traveler" • "The Enterprise Mutiny" • "Museum at the End of Time" • "Day of the Inquisitors" • "The Cosmic Cavemen" • "The Hijacked Planet" • "The Haunted Asteroid" • "A World Gone Mad" • "The Mummies of Heitius VII" • "Siege in Superspace" • "Child's Play" • "The Trial of Captain Kirk" • "Dwarf Planet" • "The Perfect Dream" • "Ice Journey" • "The Mimicking Menace" • "Death of a Star" • "The Final Truth" • "The Animal People" • "The Choice" • "The PsychoCrystals" • "A Bomb in Time" • "One of Our Captains Is Missing!" • "Prophet of Peace" • "Furlough to Fury" • "The Evictors" • "World Against Time" • "The World Beneath the Waves" • "Prince Traitor" • "Mr. Oracle" • "This Tree Bears Bitter Fruit" • "Murder on the Enterprise" • "A Warp in Space" • "Planet of No Life" • "Destination... Annihilation!" • "And a Child Shall Lead Them" • "What Fools These Mortals Be.." • "Sport of Knaves" • "A World Against Itself" • "No Time Like the Past" • "Spore of the Devil" • "The Brain-Damaged Planet" • "To Err Is Vulcan" • "The Empire Man!" • "Operation Con Game"
Additional stories "James T. Kirk: Psycho-File" • "A Page From Scotty's Diary" • "Spock: Psycho-File" • "From Sputnik to Warp Drive"
Games "Voyage of Discovery" • "The Tunnel of Death" • "... Wild Goose Chase!" • "A Hint of Life" • "Space Chase" • "Escape from the Clinging Dags"
Collections Star Trek Annuals (1969197019721973197419751976197719781979198019831986) • The Enterprise Logs (Volumes 1234) • The Key Collection (Volumes 12345) • Gold Key Archives (Volumes 12345) • Gold Key 100-Page Spectacular
Related media "The Exile" • "The Red Hour" • "Colouring Book" • "Eye of the Beholder" • "The Menace of the Mechanitrons" • "Trial by Fire!"

Timeline[]

Published Order
Previous comic:
#29: The Planet of No Return (Reprint)
TOS comics
(Gold Key)
Next comic:
#31: The Final Truth
Previous comic:
#28: The Mimicking Menace
TOS comics (Gold Key original stories) Next comic:
#31: The Final Truth
Previous story:
first story
Stories by:
Allan Moniz
Next story:
The Choice
Chronological Order
Previous adventure:
Come Away, Child
Waypoint
Memory Beta Chronology Next adventure:
'Til Death
Star Trek: The Manga
Previous comic:
Come Away, Child
Waypoint
Voyages of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), Year Two Next comic:
'Til Death
Star Trek: The Manga
Production history[]
May 1975
First published by Gold Key Comics
1975
Printed in hardcover in Star Trek Annual 1976 (World Distributors Limited)
August 1976
Printed in the omnibus The Enterprise Logs, Volume 4 (Golden Press)
June 2004
Printed in the omnibus The Key Collection, Volume 4 (Checker Book Publishing Group)
September 2008
Included on The Complete Comic Book Collection DVD (Graphic Imaging Technologies)
August 2014
Remastered in hardcover in the omnibus Gold Key Archives, Volume 5 (IDW)
26 April 2018
Remastered in hardcover in the omnibus Graphic Novel Collection #35 (Eaglemoss)
Translations[]
1976
German: As "Ein Stern Verlöscht" in Zack 1976 #19 (Koralle)
1977
Dutch: As "De dood van een ster" in the omnibus Ruimteschip Enterprise Classics Strip-Paperback #1 (De Vrijbuiter)
1978
German: As "Tod eines Sterns" in the omnibus Raumschiff Enterprise Comic Taschenbuch #1 (Condor)
2006
Italian: As "Morte di una Stella" in the omnibus The Gold Key Collection, Volume 8 (Free Books)

External link[]

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