Buck Bokai: The Last Boy of Summer – Star Trek

Posted: October 22, 2019 at 4:44 am

Heres what we know: Its 2026, and Buck Bokai is at the plate. Whether its his first at-bat, his third, or his sixth doesnt matter he has hit safely in 56 games in a row. Its 2026, and with every at-bat, Buck Bokai might break a Major League record that has stood since 1941. The pitcher hurls the ball at the plate, what kind of pitch lost to history Bokai swings, and makes contact. The sound of wood on leather rings out, sharp and sweet, but its a ground ball. Bokai runs. Fielder Eddie Newsom tries to make a play, but the ball just squeaks out under his glove. Bokai is safe. 57 games. A new record. A legend for all time.

Heres what we know: Its 2042, sixteen years later, and Buck Bokai is at the plate. He isnt such a young man anymore. Baseball isnt such a young sport, either. Invented in 1839, the game became the national pastime of America, and loved and played around the world. It survived corruption, scandal, steroids, and two world wars, but the world is turning sour again and it wont survive a third. This is the final World Series. There are 300 people in the stands. The pitcher hurls his ball at the plate. Bokai swings, makes contact. The sound of wood on leather rings out, louder than it should, and its a home run. He rounds the bases, touches home, and thats it for baseball. So long, folks.

Buck Bokai is one of Star Treks odder tragic figures. A once-in-a-lifetime talent who peaked at the decline of his craft, hes remembered solely, so far as we know, by an android playing a holodeck recreation of 20th century San Francisco, the commanding officer of a space station perched tenuously at the mouth of the galaxys only stable wormhole, and that officers son. That hes remembered at all is a miracle given the fate of the sport he played, and the fate of the world some years after he clubbed his last homer. Khan Noonien Singh, after all, was an obscure name in the database of the original starship Enterprises computers, and he was once the undisputed ruler of over a quarter of Earth. Were it not for the long memories of the sports few 24th century devotees, Bokais life, his accomplishments, would have fallen to dust.

Though the episode we see him in, Deep Space Nines If Wishes Were Horses, is more infamous than good, its a gift for anybody with an interest in the fabric of Star Treks vision of humanitys future. The Bokai who breaks DiMaggios hit streak is a nameless figure, a point of data recited by Data on The Next Generation because hes learned the facts of 20th and 21st century life to better fit into his captains Dixon Hill holonovel. The Bokai that appears in Deep Space Nine is a fully realized man, one whose exploits inspire Benjamin Sisko, one of the Federations greatest heroes. He provides context for stories that take place in Earths distant past. He stands as a hero at the intersection of skill and chance. He is, by virtue of his existence, one of the few models were given for what becomes of human sport as we stretch out from earth and take our place among the stars.

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Heres what we know: Captain Jonathan Archer enjoys water polo. Lieutenant Commander Worf brutally learns the differences between human and Klingon physiology when he accidentally kills a classmate during a game of soccer. Captain Jean Luc-Picard loves to fence. Chief Miles OBrien cant help but kayak, even if it means tearing his rotator cuff. Doctor Julian Bashir, as a consequence of his genetic engineering, is too skilled to lose at darts. Doctor Phlox, a Denobulan serving on a human ship, hits shots effortlessly without truly grasping the concept of basketball. As humanity betters itself and encounters new races, its sports become obsolete. Springball, parrises squares, tsunkatse these are the games of the future.

It makes sense. One of the quintessential assertions Star Trek makes about Humanity is that we, as a species, are driven to seek out, introduce ourselves to, and live among other species. We grow attached to the games those species play first as a means of finding a foothold in their culture, then because it presents the unending challenge of mastery. The same is not true of the species we meet. In 2375 the Vulcan Logicians visit Deep Space Nine and destroy Benjamin Siskos Niners 10-1. The Niners one run is framed as a moral victory, but whats a moral victory to a Vulcan? What is baseball to a Vulcan?

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A nostalgist would say that baseball is a living connection to Americas past, though I suspect Abner Doubleday wouldnt recognize the game as its played today as the one he invented in a pre-Civil War America. Its a global game, but not to the extent that Star Trek envisions. The Major Leagues have yet to become the Planetary League, and the Toronto Blue Jays are still the only foreign team eligible to play in the World Series. There are no teams in London, but it seems unlikely that the game is destined for an ignoble end in our time. 2019 is Buck Bokais rookie season for the Crenshaw Monarchs, and if the story of his career is that his genius is as obvious as it is underappreciated, the same cannot be said for generational talents like Mike Trout or Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Even the worst teams in memory, like my beloved 2003 Detroit Tigers, drew more than 300 fans to the ballpark. As long as there is time to pass, theres baseball to be played.

Heres what we know: Its 2063, and humanity has no time left to pass. Zefram Cochrane takes his seat in the cockpit of Earths first warp-capable ship, the Phoenix, and his flight catches the attention of a Vulcan ship nearby. Its been 20 years since Buck Bokai hit his last home run and, at least professionally, there are no home runs in his, or our, future. Buck Bokai is 65 years old. The game of baseball is 224 years old. Most games arent meant to last forever. The legacies of great men are often forgotten. Would Buck Bokai be Benjamin Siskos favorite ballplayer had he struck out, the count 3-2, his legacy that he merely tied with Joltin Joe? Would he be Siskos favorite ballplayer without the tinge of tragedy and finality that came with his last swing of the bat?

Baseball, like many sports, is a medium through which humans tell stories about themselves. In 2063 we learn that there is more to the universe than humanity, a vast number of races with whom we wish to communicate. Try explaining the rules of baseball to someone who doesnt like baseball. Now try explaining the rules of baseball to an alien. Whats more interesting to an interplanetary visitor: the man who broke the warp barrier, or the intricacies of the infield fly rule? Buck Bokai was a great baseball player, but his role in human history is to haunt a corner of it, a story written in a dead language and passed from one hobbyist to the next. Its not that hes the last boy of summer. Its just that summer eventually comes to mean something else.

Colette Arrand (she/her) is a transsexual poet from Athens, Georgia. She is the author of THE FUTURE IS HERE AND EVERYTHING MUST BE DESTROYED (Split Lip Press, 2019) and HOLD ME GORILLA MONSOON (OPO Books & Objects, 2017). She can be found on Twitter @colettearrand

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Buck Bokai: The Last Boy of Summer - Star Trek

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