None that I'm aware of. But they basically look like bipedal wolves.Any pictures of the San-Tarh anywhere?
None that I'm aware of. But they basically look like bipedal wolves.Any pictures of the San-Tarh anywhere?![]()
Oh, that's easy: the Elabrej look like Chode from Tripping the Rift......Wait until you try and picture the Elabrej from later in the series.Although, actually, I do have a pretty clear personal image of the Elabrej. They look a bit like butterbeans with stilt-like limbs jutting off....
Did you read The Brave and The Bold?
My biggest issue with the IKS Gorkon is it doesn't quite fit my conception of the time period and cultures involved. If it was set during the Original Series, yes, certainly, I could see this story happening. The Klingons were as conquest happy then as Genghis Khan. The thing is, I can't actually buy a Alexander the Great-style crusade of conquest by the Klingons is something the Federation would not be throwing an enormous fit over. This is almost certainly something which would have been covered in the Khitomer Accords since I can't imagine it reads, "You can conquer anyone you want as long as it's not us."
Just so you know, it takes place between DI and AGDTD. I'm not sure, but I believe the stories in TB&TB build of off each other, so you'll probably want to read Book 1 too.Not yet. I have book 2# but didn't want to start it without a guarantee of Klingon focus.
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Why would the Klingon Empire have agreed to something like that, though? Imagine if they tried to put a clause in the Accords that forced the Federation to abide by Klingon values in some interstellar diplomatic aspect by the same reasoning.
I think the point is that it's inconsistent for the Federation to have been willing to form an alliance with a conquering power in the first place. As I've mentioned before, TNG: "Heart of Glory" implied that the Empire had outgrown its warlike ways for the most part and it was only renegades like Korris who still wanted to expand and conquer. But later Trek contradicted that by portraying the Empire to be just as aggressive and warlike as ever, which made it retroactively out of character for the Federation to accept them as a close ally.
Ah, fair, yeah. I can still see it, though I'm having trouble putting the reasoning I'm feeling into words at the moment. It feels to me like a number of various factors coming together, including providing aid to Qo'noS following the Praxis disaster and a desire to find an end to the cold war between them, leading over time to an attempt at moderating the Klingon Empire through formal diplomatic relations rather than military action, but I can't really put that together into a cogent argument.
I can better see the view you're (and possibly Charles is) talking about, though, yeah.
Basically, a simple, "The Federation is furious about this, threatening sanctions, and feels betrayed by Martrok but he tells them to suck it up as it's not breaking any treaties as these aren't EXISTING worlds in the Empire."
That sort of thing.
Charles Phipps: Thanks for the thoughtful review. The issue of how the Federation deals with the Klingons as allies is something I covered in A Time for War, a Time for Peace, specifically the presidential election that is one of that novel's subplots.
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