Articles of the Federation, which is taking me a while for various reasons, but I'm enjoying it quite a bit.
I just started Vulcan's Glory by DC Fontana.
There's been clamor on this board for an AOTF2, but I think it was said that it wasn't likely in the cards.I'd love some more in the same vein...
Hah, me too...read all the things! (I have been putting off a friend's non-Trek novel for a while because I wanted more TrekLit...)I just recently got back into TrekLit after many years, so I have a lot of catching up to do. I decided to start with TNG: A Time To Be Born, which I'm enjoying quite a lot.
I'm not sure why, either...I just started Vulcan's Glory by DC Fontana.
I just reread that recently.
Funny thing: Fontana establishes that a young Montgomery Scott also served aboard Pike's Enterprise, a fact that, as far as I know, has been conspicuously ignored by every subsequent Pike novel.
Wonder why?
I'm not sure why, either...I just started Vulcan's Glory by DC Fontana.
I just reread that recently.
Funny thing: Fontana establishes that a young Montgomery Scott also served aboard Pike's Enterprise, a fact that, as far as I know, has been conspicuously ignored by every subsequent Pike novel.
Wonder why?
I've thought of Scotty's presence during Pike's era as being "true" ever since reading that novel and I'd generally be inclined to defer to one of the main TOS writers on such a point, especially when there hasn't been any subsequent canon to contradict it.
You provided your own answer, Greg -- the events of "The Menagerie." If Scotty served under Pike at the time that "The Cage" took place, then he would've been involved in the trial in far greater depth. He would've been called to testify. Instead, everything in the episode indicates that Spock is the only person who was on the Enterprise at that time who's still at the post.I just started Vulcan's Glory by DC Fontana.
I just reread that recently.
Funny thing: Fontana establishes that a young Montgomery Scott also served aboard Pike's Enterprise, a fact that, as far as I know, has been conspicuously ignored by every subsequent Pike novel.
Wonder why?
Lilith's Brood is actually a single-book reprint of the entire trilogy. Originally compiled as Xenogenesis, it's really three books - Dawn, Adulthood Rites, and Imago. So that explains why it's so long - you're reading three novels in one.Currently still reading Octavia Butler's Lilith's Brood. Good lord that's a long book! Really good so far, though.
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