Bennett hits it out of the park again. I love where he is taking the story of the Federation. Well done sir!
It's Google Drive's version of Microsoft Word documents. Google Drive lets users create, upload, store, edit, etc. up to 15 GB of electronic files for free. Kind of like Dropbox, if you've ever heard of that. All you need is a Google account. You can then access it by Internet browser or by app.^See, this is how not a techie I am. I have no idea what you just said. What is a Google Doc?
Sigh. Gotta little further. So Sareks mom's first husband was Ton Cruise?
Sigh. Gotta little further. So Sareks mom's first husband was Ton Cruise?
What?
Sarek's mom married her first husband who ended up being gay all along and she divorced him and married Sarek's dad.
People discover that their high school sweethearts are gay all the time; it happens, it's a part of life.
I'll be coming back to this thread in more detail when I have time--as usual, Deranged Nasat's very thoughtful posts require some time to read, digest, and respond to.
In general you and I take different approach vectors and come to different interpretations of what we see, whether we're analysing reality, fiction or both. We both acknowledge that instinctual urges and deeper motivations inform, underlie or overshadow surface motives, and we both agree that individual egotistical pursuit of power/gain and depersonalized commitment to the wider group are both involved. Oversimplifying here, the difference is mostly that you tend to view the former as the more powerful, I think - the one that best defines the motive for various societal institutions, customs, and practices - whereas I favour the latter. You see power hierarchies, I see tribal huddles. You see individuals clawing for influence over each other, I see sacrifice of the individual for security of the group - though, again, each of these views incorporates the other truth within it. Like yin and yang; there is part of each in the other. I'm either yin or yang, Sci, and you're the opposite. Which means on some level we may be defined by incompatibility - but in reality there is not in fact, that much of a gulf. 
), but then you and I have never let that get in the way of anything. 
So Solkar is confirmed to be the Vulcan who made first contact with Zefram Cochrane on Earth? That's too bad, I was never a fan of that idea. Too much "small universe" syndrome.
Christopher,
First of all, The cover is a clever illustration of the IDIC symbol being formed by the overlay of what I assume is the ark of Surak overlaid upon the planet Vulcan. Was the cover suggested by you? Bravo!
However, if that is indeed a representation of the ark of Surak, shouldn't it have 3 large isosceles faces, per page 107 of the printed novel? Its supposed to be a tetrahedron, however the figure on the cover appears to be a standard 4 sided pyramid with a four sided base.
As a matter of fact, the suggestion was mine. That isn't usually the case with book covers, but I had the idea and suggested it to my editor with no expectation it would be followed. I'm pleased that it was.
No, the cover image is an accurate represtentation of the Kir'Shara prop. It's beveled inward at the base. I can see why you'd think it was looking slightly upward at a square-based pyramid, but it's actually looking face-on or slightly downward at just one face of the artifact.

I thought so, since it seemed that you had a history with Gene Rodenberry's IDIC symbol, per http://startrekfactcheck.blogspot.com/2013/08/dont-know-much-about-vulcan-philosophy.html
About halfway through, pretty underwhelmed so far, seems to be one of Christopher's weaker efforts again.
2/3 through now and no improvement.
If nothing drastic happens quality-wise I don't really see this getting a higher rating than Below Average from me. None of the plots are really doing it for me and Christopher's real world allusions have no subtelty at all...
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