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| Trek Literature "...Good words. That's where ideas begin." |
| View Poll Results: Rate Dark Mirror. | |||
| Outstanding |
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16 | 55.17% |
| Above Average |
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9 | 31.03% |
| Average |
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2 | 6.90% |
| Below Average |
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0 | 0% |
| Poor |
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2 | 6.90% |
| Voters: 29. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#61 | |
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Commander
Location: Cork, Ireland
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Re: TNG: Dark Mirror by Diane Duane Review Thread (Spoilers!)
Lacking the scientific background, I consider all the universes featuring Earth stemming from one source, with timelines multiplying like Tribbles (MyrU: "Places of Exile"). Maybe they remain physically in the neighbourhood, thus explaining while our heroes usually cross into similar universes often and other spaces (fluidic space, transdimensional space) rarely.
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1.000 years: University Leipzig, 1409-2409 Gorn to be wild! |
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#62 |
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Writer
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Re: TNG: Dark Mirror by Diane Duane Review Thread (Spoilers!)
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Updated 5/28/13 with discussion of Rise of the Federation Book 1. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#63 |
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Commander
Location: Cork, Ireland
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Re: TNG: Dark Mirror by Diane Duane Review Thread (Spoilers!)
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1.000 years: University Leipzig, 1409-2409 Gorn to be wild! |
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#64 |
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Writer
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Re: TNG: Dark Mirror by Diane Duane Review Thread (Spoilers!)
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Updated 5/28/13 with discussion of Rise of the Federation Book 1. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#65 | |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: TNG: Dark Mirror by Diane Duane Review Thread (Spoilers!)
This is what I meant when I pointed out earlier the difference between a timeline and a universe.
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It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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#66 |
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Commander
Location: Cork, Ireland
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Re: TNG: Dark Mirror by Diane Duane Review Thread (Spoilers!)
One reason why we can have alternate timelines and parallel universes in fiction is because it answers one of the most tempting questions: "What if?" (cf. 2002's The Time Machine). This is something "real" history cannot answer, fiction can. ![]() That's why I regard conflicting continuities (TrekLit vs. STO, 80s continuity vs. current, 7 ends to the 5YM, etc.) as part of one multiverse - because alternate timelines are sooo much cooler than seeing it from a real-world-perspective. Am I making sense? Each iteration is more or less enjoyable entertainment in itself but it can have the spacy extra of being interpreted as an answer to "What if?".
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1.000 years: University Leipzig, 1409-2409 Gorn to be wild! |
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#67 | |
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Commander
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Re: TNG: Dark Mirror by Diane Duane Review Thread (Spoilers!)
Also, Christopher, I agree that the most important thing is that the story is enjoyable, but I also think there is a value in furthering the work of creating a very largely-consistent tapestry of continuity. I mean, really: we have over 700 hours of film and now dozens, if not hundreds of novels that have been published to be internally consistent. Among that body? There are maybe a dozen inconsistencies that are just totally irreconcilable with the rest of the established work ("The Alternative Factor," some things from TAS, the Tobin Dax short story having warp-incapable Romulans, other things I can't think of, maybe "Threshold"). Everything else, with a touch of imagination or squinting, is basically consistent. (You could probably explain even explain "Threshold" and Tobin's Romulans this way.) There are some things that don't necessarily support established continuity, but few things that actually contradict it. (Which is actually very realistic, since the real world is extraordinarily complicated, as any high schooler who has taken AP Euro History will know.) Isn't that actually pretty incredible? I think that represents something of artistic and creative value. And I think it's very easy to be extremely creative within that framework, so I don't think it's really a threat to good story-telling. |
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#68 |
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Writer
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Re: TNG: Dark Mirror by Diane Duane Review Thread (Spoilers!)
But there's nothing wrong with stories being out of continuity or being in alternative continuities either. There's value in good stories whether they can be made to fit or not. And yeah, sometimes you can justify an out-of-continuity story as being in an alternate timeline. Maybe some fans can believe they all are. But my understanding of how alternate timelines work is more scientifically based so it's more limited. There are some stories I can accept as alternate timelines, but a lot where the nature of the discrepancies can't, in my view, be plausibly explained that way. And in those cases, I'm perfectly satisfied just to enjoy them as alternative fictional takes. I don't think it diminishes them in any way that they're not supposedly "real" in some sense, so I don't feel the need to concoct elaborate rationalizations for how they can be pretend-"real."
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Updated 5/28/13 with discussion of Rise of the Federation Book 1. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#69 | ||
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Commander
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Re: TNG: Dark Mirror by Diane Duane Review Thread (Spoilers!)
[but actually, it's one of the things I really love about your novels ]), nor did I say that you said that continuity was a threat to good storytelling.What you said was:
For the record, it doesn't bother me if I can't connect a Trekwork into a larger continuity– but I do like it when I can, and I think there's value to it. And I know you agree with me on that. And I wanted to articulate why I thought it was of value. Additionally, for the record, I don't believe that the corollary holds, that a work without continuity is therefore without value. It's a reward-based system, not a punitive one.
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[but actually, it's one of the things I really love about your novels 



