Summary: "The Red King" picks up immediately where "Taking Wing" left off, with the USS Titan having been sucked through the Great Bloom and into the Small Magellanic Cloud dwarf galaxy 200,000 light years away.
This area of space is primarily controlled by the Neyel, descendants of Zefram Cochrane's team of scientists and engineers that developed the first warp drive engine; their hollow-asteroid L-5 spacehab was transported to this galaxy when a warp-field test went awry (The Lost Era: The Sundered). Though descended from humans, the Neyel have adapted to this area of space by using genetic engineering, and thus have gray skin, tails, and other non-human features. They maintained a hegemony by conquering and enslaving many of this galaxy's indigenous species, up until Federation Ambassador Aidan Burgess visited a few decades back (she stole a shuttlecraft from the USS Excelsior, the ship Tuvok and Akaar were serving aboard at the time, during the Neyel Tholian war). Burgess taught them to act more like Starfleet officers than conquerors, and was revered by many of the Neyel, but not all...
(In a flashback, we learn that Akaar and Tuvok hate each other because they were stranded on a desert planet and Akaar ceremonially killed himself so Tuvok wouldn't run out of supplies before he could be rescued. However, Tuvok did a mindmeld and resuscitated Akaar, dishonoring Akaar's sacrifice--which is a big no-no in Capellan culture.)
A Neyel convoy is destroyed when Donatra's missing Romulan fleet comes through the Great Bloom and attacks them without so much as a courtesy hail. Some of the Neyel survive in escape pods.
A cloaked Klingon ship came through the Bloom as well, though it was much more worse for wear than the Romulan ships. Donatra beams the Klingon captain aboard and ostensibly offers to help--though really she needs supplies and Klingon ships have boobytraps everywhere.
The Romulans notice the Neyel escape pods and beam the survivors aboard. They can't speak the Neyel language, so they use invasive mind probes on the survivor named Frane to rapidly learn the language. After interrogation, Donatra learns that her fleet survived and is here in Neyel space.
A problem soon arises, however: the Great Bloom is causing a sentient protouniverse to form, and it will soon consume the entire Small Magellanic galaxy to make space for itself--destroying everything within.
The Romulans, Klingons, and Neyel come aboard Titan to discuss what to do about the situation. Frane says that it is the prophesized "Sleeper" or "Red King" of Neyel legend, awakening to punish his people for their past enslavement of other races. The Titan science officers theorize that it's possible this has happened before, since this section of space is "downhill" from many others, so the legend may have some basis on past events.
The Klingons and Romulans decide the best course of action is to blow up the protouniverse, but Riker wants to find a less hostile solution, since the "Red King" displays signs of sentience: it has taken control of the fleet of Romulan ships and has begun clearing out solar systems to make space for itself (by using subspace distortions caused by the ships' warp fields close to the star's photosphere).
An away team from Titan and another from Donatra's ship beam aboard the lead Romulan ship and find the crew unconscious, but alive. To regain control of the ship they erase the Red King from the computer's AI; however, this causes the Red King to accelerate it's consumption of space; when the intelligence is forced out of the computer, it had to go elsewhere and thus started "reordering" local space even faster.
The massive subspace distortions are set to overtake the Neyel coreworld of Oghen in a few days, and Riker wants Titan, the Klingons, and the Romulans to help evacuate the planet, since this is partially their fault (they think coming through the Great Bloom could've somehow brought the protouniverse here, as something similar happened in Deep Space 9). However, the Klingon ship is too damaged to do much of anything, and the Romulans decide that since they got their fleet back, staying in Neyel space is too risky (the Great Bloom could close back up and they'd be stranded) and they want to GTFO. Riker rebukes Donatra and tells her she has no honor, so she changes her mind and decides to help. Romulan co-Commander Suran says there's no way in hell he's sticking around, so Donatra roofies him and confines him to sickbay.
Titan arrives at Oghen to find that the whole planet is being fucked up: there are massive tsunamis, tornados, hurricanes, etc. being caused by the spatial distortions. The best plan Riker can come up with is to send shuttles down to rescue as many people as possible, then put them on the hollow-asteroid station near the planet. Admiral Akaar saves a bunch of crazy religious people who were trying to commit mass suicide, but they get all indignant about it; Akaar realizes this is exactly what happened between him and Tuvok, so he instantly gets over his 70-year long grudge and forgives Tuvok. Security chief Ranul Keru is forced to leave another member of his team, T'Lirin, behind to die when his shuttle is forced to take off before she can get aboard.
After they get as many Neyel as possible aboard the asteroid, the Romulan fleet tows the asteroid with tractor beams back to the Great Bloom. The only potential solution the Titan science crew could come up with to stop the protouniverse's expansion and to get back home is to fly through the Bloom and have the Romulans detonate a bunch of their warp cores on their way out. The Romulans are obviously not happy about this, but agree to it as long as Riker won't tell the Klingons that most of their fleet will be disabled. This is just about the time that Commander Suran wakes up, pulls a phaser on Donatra, and says there's no way in hell they're going to blow up 12 of their warp cores. Donatra gets the ship's computer to disable Suran's weapon, then stabs him to death with her honor blade.
Since the Klingon ship is too beat to hell to travel through the Great Bloom on its own accord, and since Titan needs all its power diverted to its sensor net to seek out and avoid spatial disturbances during the return trip, it's up to the Romulans to tow the Klingon ship back through. Donatra gives her word that she won't try any funny business and the Klingons acquiesce.
Everyone flies into the Great Bloom and things seem to going to plan; however, the Romulans break their word (duh) and use their tractor beams to tear the Klingon ship to pieces, so they don't have to worry about the Klingons learning about all their lost warp cores. The remaining ships all make it through by the skin of their teeth. Riker is royally pissed that Donatra destroyed the Klingon ship, but he begrudgingly agrees not to tell the Klingons, for fear of throwing the Federation's diplomatic mission to Romulus out the window.
The Magellanic galaxy is so far away that it will take many years before they find out if they stopped the protouniverse from destroying it, but everyone's glad to be back home so who fucking cares about that place.
Riker decides to split up Ranul Keru's roles as both Tactial Officer and Security Officer into 2 separate positions, and asks Tuvok to become the new Tactical Officer and Second Officer. Tuvok accepts, with the stipulation that his wife live aboard with him.
There's a big party on the bridge for all the senior officers to (finally) celebrate the completion of the ship's dedication plaque. After much ado, Riker ultimately decided to go with a quote from Surak of Vulcan: "Infinite diversity in infinite combinations", which perfectly describes Titan's crew, and acts as a memorial to the Vulcan crewman lost on Oghen, T'Lirin.
With all repairs complete, Titan heads off to explore the Gum nebula.
Review: 2.75 stars.
"The Red King" was OK, but I had a lot of problems with it. First and foremost, it focused way too much on the Neyel race, serving as a direct sequel to the "Lost Era" book "The Sundered" that I've never read and don't really care to (I've ordered a used copy, but I doubt I'll ever read it). What better way to kick off a new book series about a brand new ship, the USS Titan, than to make it a sequel to a book written years before about the USS Excelsior? No thank you. Whereas the first book is all about Federation/Romulan/Klingon/Reman politics--which I found fairly intriguing--this book has almost nothing to do with any of that--and I was not intrigued.
I was onboard with the Great Bloom functioning as a wormhole to the Small Magellanic galaxy (SMG) because it was "downhill" from the Milky Way, and I liked the idea that this caused a protouniverse to come through and start replacing the galaxy to make room for itself--but the protouniverse was sentient? At first I thought sentient life had simply formed somewhere within the protouniverse, so they didn't want to destroy it, but then the "sentience" itself took over the Romulan fleet... This was a really weird concept for me that I just didn't care for--it's unimaginable to me that one day our Milky Way galaxy might suddenly come alive and consciously decide to go to eat another galaxy.
So, they erase the sentience from the Romulan computers, and this causes the protouniverse's expansion rate to increase, because now that it was out of the computers it had nowhere else to go? So if it was slower for this "Red King" to use the ships, then why did it use them in the first place? Did the Red King hitch a ride on the Romulan fleet back when it went through the Great Bloom, and that's how it initially began taking over the SMG? I just didn't think it was clear at all. And did this all happen before or not? It seems that the "downhill" concept, coupled with the Neyel mythology about the Red Sleeper, could mean that this all happened in the past, but that was never really clarified either. I'm not usually one to get befuddled by plot details, but oy vey this plot is convoluted.
It wasn't all bad though. On the plus side, there were some good character moments and ideas: Torvig and Cethente talking about how it's "interesting" that humans are primarily the species in charge on the ship (and in Starfleet in general) was provocative (though it's obviously due to TV budget constraints), and the Neyel enslaving all the other species in their galaxy shows how much worse it could've been.
I was also glad to see the Reman Mekrikruk get a bit more development, though it still wasn't much. I thought maybe he'd turn out to be trouble, since they broke him out of prison, after all, but he turned out to be a genuinely nice guy--and even saved some girl from getting raped. I actually wish he would've joined the crew at the end (like Tuvok!), so we could learn more about him (and because we still didn't know much about the Remans in general), but that would've been too interesting I think.
Akaar on the other hand, is a total dumbass. He holds a grudge against Tuvok for 70-80 years, then realizes what a jackass he's been when he saves a bunch of suicidal cult members THE SAME WAY TUVOK SAVED HIM. It was so immediately obvious what was going to happen that I actually groaned out loud when it proceeded exactly as expected. And what an outrageous coincidence that two Excelsior crew members who dealt with the Neyel in "The Sundered" just so happened to be on Titan when it gets sucked into the SMG. Give me a break.
Worst of all though was the ending. The ships fly back through the Great Bloom and then!...everything's just fine. All goes according to plan (other than the obvious twist that the Romulans fucked over the Klingons--who could've seen that coming?!) in the most anticlimactic way possible. Even better, we never even find out if blowing the warp cores stopped the protouniverse from taking over the SMG or not. Not that I care anyway.
All the bad aside, I really loved the scene at the very end when they unveiled the dedication plaque; it was a touching and appropriate character moment where all the senior officers finally got a little chance to shine--and something finally went right for a change. Maybe if you gutted all the middle out about the Neyel and just left the very beginning and the very end, there might actually be a decent novella here. As it stands though, it's a shame that the excellent first Titan book will be forever bogged down by this disappointing follow-up. I definitely won't be re-reading this one any time soon.