Trophy

Bill Baldwin

Book 3 of Helmsman

Language: English

Publisher: Questar

Published: Dec 15, 1989

Description:

THE EMPIRE'S LAST HOPE FOR FREEDOM

The long-ranging war for galactic domination ends as the Emperor Triannic and his evil League of Dark Stars suddenly sue for armistice. Empire-based radicals, seeking to maintain peace, are disabling the Fleet. And valiant Helmsman Wilf Brim is out of a job!

To survive, and to keep the love of the Princess Margot Efer-wyck, Wilf enters the great Mitchell Trophy Race. But soon he learns that the League will also be in the running, showing off their might in a secret ploy to gain new allies for a new war. Now Wilf and the Imperial Star Team must pilot a dangerously fast, experimental starship in a series of death-defying challenges against Triannic's vicious forces. Either they'll win--or sacrifice the Empire to utter tyranny.

The long-ranging war for galactic domination finds valiant Helmsman Wilf Brim down on his luck and out of a job. To survive, and to keep the love of the Princess Margot, Wilf enters the great Mitchell Trophy race--and faces a series of death-defying challenges to save the Empire from utter tyranny.

The Trophy was, is, and always has been, a futuristic, Military-Science-Fiction novel about intra-galactic competition and conflict. Originally published in 1990, it is third in a series of seven novels about the adventures of StarSailor and expert Helmsman Wilf Brim during an epoch of discord and outright war among various star-nations—within a galaxy that could be a far-future version of the one in which we live.

This special, “Director’s Cut” Edition is heavily re-written, a la George Lucas’ rewrite of the Star Wars Trilogy, to bring it more in line with later novels in the series, as well as the first two “Director’s Cut” Editions of The Helmsman and Galactic Convoy. This edition also answers a question from thousands of readers: “What happened to Anna Romanoff,” a love-interest character in the novel who, previously, never quite made it to the next in the series

The novel begins just as Brim—once a fast-rising First Lieutenant in the Imperial Fleet—has been thrown out the service during a post-war reduction in force (RIF), along with thousands of other warriors by a Imperial Government that all-too-easily forgets how much it relied on them only a short time previously.

The change devastates Brim; like so many other young men, from humble beginnings, he bases much of his self-worth on his success in his occupation. For a short while, he hangs on piloting worn-out third-rate spaceliners, but when that operation fails, Brim has nowhere to turn. As a last resort, he works passage to on one of the grand liners as a baggage-handler to the City of Atalanta on the planet Hador-Haelic where, eventually, old friends involve him in the great Mitchell Trophy astroplane races, and he ends up piloting for the Imperial Starflight Society.

Anyone familiar with the history of air racing will instantly recognize The Trophy as my personal tribute to one of the grand fascinations of my life: the Schneider Trophy Races that began in 1913 with fragile Bleriot biplane racers on floats and ended in 1931 with Reginald Mitchell's early masterpiece, the Supermarine S.6B, that retired the trophy for all time. In addition, its twelve-cylinder engine was the prototype for the Rolls-Royce Merlin and Griffin engines that years later powered Mitchell's superb Spitfire, the U.S. Mustang, the British Lancaster bomber, and most of the unlimited Gold Cup hydroplane racers of the late 1940s, the 1950s, the 1960s, and the early 1970s.

ON THE "DIRECTOR'S CUT" VERSION: Turned out that Trophy was a pivotal book in the Helmsman Saga, because in the original version, the prototype Starfury was a destroyer-sized starship, but by the time The Defenders came along, it had shrunk to something a fraction of its original size--and made the intervening Mercenaries extra difficult to bring into line with the later books.. It took a lot of rewriting.

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About the Author

Bill Baldwin wrote The Helmsman (1985)/2003), Galactic Convoy (1987/2003), The Trophy (1990/2007), The Mercenaries (1991), The Defenders (1992), The Siege (1994), Canby's Legion (1995), and The Defiance (October 1996), Science Fiction novels. Helmsman, Convoy, and Trophy now available in new, revised "Director's-Cut" Editions by special order at bookstores and on-line.