new canon vs novelverse: worst case scenario

Discussion in 'Trek Literature' started by F. King Daniel, Jun 1, 2012.

  1. F. King Daniel

    F. King Daniel Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    The current ongoing Trek Lit continuity has been going a long time now. And with future Trek movies being set in the 23rd century of an alternate timeline (for the time being, at least), and impending 2387 supernova aside, the novels are free to reshape the galaxy as they see fit. We've seen characters die, enemies vanquished and new alliances formed. The characters we know have changed somewhat. Fun is had by all (well, except Edit_XYZ)

    Now.... what if something came along to fuck it all up? What if, as unlikely as it seems, something like Micheal Dorn's straight-to-DVD movie about a terrorist hunting Captain Worf came along, and in a few lines of backstory completely contradicted the happenings of the Trek novels?

    Say, in this hypothetical film we learned...

    Janeway's running Starfleet.
    Voyager's a museum and has been since it got back.
    The Borg are a constant threat.
    The Gorn and Tholians have been locked in open warfare for a century.
    The USS Titan is a Sovereign-class ship.
    Picard and Beverly never got together.

    What would happen to the novels then? And what would happen to your enjoyment of the Typhon Pact-era novels, should something like this ever transpire? Would they be ruined? Or would you not mind?
     
  2. bok2384

    bok2384 Commander Red Shirt

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    An interesting question KingDaniel. I agree that Michael Dorn's movie is probably a long-shot, but if it does happen and is thus declared canon, I'd like to think that all of the current storylines would be wrapped up and then a new separate era with the new status quo would begin.

    Failing that, you could have some huge galaxy-wide crisis which results in the giant reset button being hit. This will likely be the preferred route, go out with a bang, not a whimper.
     
  3. Deranged Nasat

    Deranged Nasat Vice Admiral Admiral

    New canon that conflicted with the direction taken by trek lit wouldn't affect my appreciation of the novels. I became a Star Trek fan around 2001/2002, and the current novel line has always been just as integral to my enjoyment of the franchise as the canon material. I'd likely relegate any new film contradicting the direction those novels have taken to a "Myriad Universes"-type scenario. In other words, I'd personally shunt the new canon into the hypothetical, even if it's supposed to work the other way 'round ;) No matter how good a new film, I doubt it could measure up to the enjoyment I've gotten from the many dozens of novels; disregarding such an engaging and complex take on Trek in order to incorporate a small slice of on-screen goodness isn't something I'd be willing to do. Given my preference for fictional worlds that are self-consistant, I'd have to "favor" one over the other to retain my full enjoyment; that will seem foolish and unfortunate to some, I know, but it's how I work. :p It doesn't mean I'd be automatically displeased with a new release.

    As for what would happen to the novels, I'd hope that the current line and its ongoing arcs are popular enough to survive on their own merit despite not agreeing with a new film's interpretation. Even if it all has to be declared "even more hypothetical than it already is", what would be the point in abandoning a take on Star Trek that's been going strong for a decade, just because a new take has arrived on the scene? The imperative that novels must agree with canon is well and good, but I hope the powers that be would acknowledge that the situation is different nowadays - the novels outlasted the TV series they were based on and have constructed a very intricate and expansive world that would lose much of its appeal if it had to be dragged back onto the rails just because a new, short stretch of track has been introduced.

    Yes, I know this sort of happened once before, when TNG aired and the budding novel continuity of the time was "invalidated", but I can't help but think of that as a rather different situation. TNG was a kind of fresh start for Trek, at first deliberately distanced from TOS. Any new TNG-inspired film wouldn't represent a grand new vision for success, it would just be another spin-off expansion of the TNG universe. Back when regular Trek was airing, I assume the reasoning behind tight conformity to canon (not just in background details of the universe but in how characters were represented, etc) was that a reader might be alienated if the books they picked up weren't extremly familiar to them and conformed closely to what they were seeing on TV (why would they pick it up if they didn't want to experience a slice of familiar Trek?). But readers now have been either following or occasionally dipping into a novel line that's been successful for almost a decade without an accompanying TV series. And Trek has expanded into so many different forms with fresh interpretations - Star Trek Online, Abramsverse, etc. Surely the novels would be granted a bit of freedom to do their own thing now?
     
  4. Fer

    Fer Commander Red Shirt

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    That would be my hope-- that some of the novels would be in the new DVD continuity, and others would be allowed to continue the novel continuity.

    Also, a direct-to-DVD movie wouldn't really have the same impact bringing in new viewers that a weekly TV show would... I would think that would allow them to be a little more lenient as well.
     
  5. Gene Starwind

    Gene Starwind Ensign

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    They should do supplement material like the Star Trek Essential Atlas, Guide to Species, that kind of stuff now that evrything TV moved into the new universe.
     
  6. bullethead

    bullethead Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    I wouldn't shed a tear if Dorn's movie or some other Prime universe project decanonized everything post-Nemesis. It's the pre-Nemesis stuff I really care about, stuff like IKS Gorkon/Klingon Empire and SCE.
     
  7. Relayer1

    Relayer1 Admiral Admiral

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    I'd like to think that Dorn, aware that he was making a small scale, possibly short lived project would set it in a small part of the Trek universe so as not to contradict other stuff. Yeah, like that would happen...

    If there's not much conflict with the novels, a clever novel retcon or two may solve the problems.

    If Dorn's project stamped all over novel continuity a big (and hopefully elegant) retcon to cleverly reset the continuity would be my choice rather than going off in its own direction, which probably wouldn't be allowed anyway.

    I'd ask Christopher to take it on, but don't know if he would be interested...
     
  8. Shon T'Hara

    Shon T'Hara Commander Red Shirt

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    Given the number of Trek actors who want to continue their characters, I wonder why we haven't seen more projects like the Shatnerverse? Dorn's probably going to have as much success with his series as Takei did with The Adventures of Captain Sulu, but you know Pocket would love to have their names on a cover.
     
  9. JRoss

    JRoss Commodore Commodore

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    Okay, under what rock have I been hiding to not hear about a new Worf movie? Any links, please?
     
  10. Therin of Andor

    Therin of Andor Admiral Moderator

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    Dulmur & Lucsly... one more time!

    "Is that a time travel joke? We hate those."

    Google is surely your friend?

    http://blastr.com/2012/05/michael-dorn-pitching-wor.php

    The actors who've played Nog, Sarek/Romulan Commander, Q, Sulu and Chekov have all written for the comics. De Lanci also did a novel with PAD. The actors who played Quark and Garak have done novels. Way back when, Nichelle Nichols wrote for the Marshak/Culbreath "New Voyages".
     
    Last edited: Jun 1, 2012
  11. Mr. Laser Beam

    Mr. Laser Beam Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    :guffaw:

    I've said it before, and I'll say it again: Get Jack Blessing and James Jansen to read a DTI audiobook or seventeen. Do it. Do it NOW.
     
  12. Therin of Andor

    Therin of Andor Admiral Moderator

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    Well, Pocket's "Star Trek Star Charts", despite being quite well received critically (minor quibbles aside), bombed at the stores.

    Sadly, Bantam's "Star Trek Maps" had also bombed: it was essentially remaindered straight to the stores, IIRC, because it came out just after their license had expired. I bought my first two copies, plus several for club raffle prizes, only a few weeks after release, for $4 each.
     
  13. Sci

    Sci Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    New ones would have to be consistent with the new canon, obviously.

    Nothing would happen to my enjoyment of them, except that I'd be disappointed they'd be contradicted. These are novels, not textbooks.
     
  14. Cybersnark

    Cybersnark Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    If Transformers can produce new content in multiple different timelines (Neo-G1, Prime, Shattered Glass, Classics, Bayverse), I fail to see why Star Trek can't. Especially since, as with Transformers, alternate universes are built-in to the mythology. It seems wasteful to not use them.
     
  15. Therin of Andor

    Therin of Andor Admiral Moderator

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    And TrekLit does use alternate universes, too: the Shatnerverse, the Mirror Universe novels (and several interpretations/extrapolations of the canonical one from "Mirror, Mirror"), the Myriad Universe collections of stories, the ten "Strange New Worlds" volumes (many of whose stories overlap and conflict), the Rihannsu novels (latter ones carried disclaimers explaining that TNG had diverged in several ways), and the "Crucible" trilogy (which deliberately ignored parts of the then-current novel continuity).
     
  16. Timewalker

    Timewalker Cat-lovin', Star Trekkin' Time Lady Premium Member

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    I would ignore anything Michael Dorn did, because I can't stand Worf. First he ate TNG, then he ate DS9. I wouldn't consider his little project to be any sort of canon whatsoever.

    There are earlier parts of the Trek TV and movie productions I don't consider canon, either - ST V, and any movies after First Contact. The only reason I reluctantly accept that movie is because I really like the character of Lily, and the movie was referenced in a Voyager episode. I accept NONE of the Enterprise series as canon.

    But that's the beauty of having so much choice. Some bits of the Trek universe I can enjoy as simply one more alternate universe of "what if it had happened this way"... and some of it I can completely ignore just because I think it was so poorly done that it doesn't deserve ANY place in the Trek universe.

    BTW, I read the book that the Garak actor wrote. It was terrific, and I say that as someone who doesn't really care for Cardassians or DS9 in general. But I always found Garak an intriguing character.
     
  17. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Canon, by definition, is the exact opposite of the individual fan's opinion. You can choose for yourself whether to count it in your personal continuity, but it's a complete abuse of vocabulary to call that "canon."
     
  18. ryan123450

    ryan123450 Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Christopher, every few months I notice your avatar and think "How much longer until Only Superhuman comes out?" And every time I check it is still months away. Still looking forward to it!
     
  19. Timewalker

    Timewalker Cat-lovin', Star Trekkin' Time Lady Premium Member

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    I should think it would be an "abuse of vocabulary" to choose something that clearly isn't canon and declare it to be canon. For example, there were several TOS novels that featured a Horta crewmember. I enjoyed those stories, but they're certainly not canon. Neither are the terrific fanfic stories I've been reading lately (although I wish they could have been canon, since they are better stories than a lot of the ones that did get made).

    I reject the above-mentioned movies and series from the parts of the canon I pay attention to, simply because I LOATHE them. For me, they Do. Not. Exist.

    I'm not saying nobody else can say they're canon. I don't think they should be, but that's just my own opinion. I would guess there are some aspects of canon Star Trek I like that others wish weren't canon. As I am free to ignore Enterprise and never worry whether or not I ever see the last 2.5 seasons of it, other people are free to ignore the episodes they hate or prefer not to ever see.
     
  20. JD

    JD Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    But the problem here is that you're using the word "canon" wrong. Canon is declared and decided entirely by Paramount & CBS. You can you don't consider it in continuity with the stuff you like, but canon is the officially sanctioned stuff, and no matter how much you might dislike something, you can't change the fact that it is canon. Canon is fact, not opinion.