She also did a fairly recent book called Banners about Francis Scott Key and the War of 1812.
Oooh. Okay, that's bought.

She also did a fairly recent book called Banners about Francis Scott Key and the War of 1812.
She also did a fairly recent book called Banners about Francis Scott Key and the War of 1812.
Oooh. Okay, that's bought.![]()
She also did a fairly recent book called Banners about Francis Scott Key and the War of 1812.
Oooh. Okay, that's bought.![]()
Tell us how it is, Allyn!
I think Carey did a fantastic job on "Ship Of The Line" and "Broken Bow" (her novelization of BB was better than the stupid episode, hands down). "Ship of The Line" is one of the few TNG books that I've read 3 times.
You forgot to include the [sarcasm][/sarcasm] tags with your post.
--Sran
I would only use the [sarcasm][/sarcasm] if I had said that Braga and company had did a fantastic job on "Broken Bow".
Sorry, but Carey took such an unprofessionally written script in "Broken Bow" and turned it into a professionally polished story.
She didn't change the events at all, she just had the characters constantly snark in inner monologue about them.
Of course, Carey was never "reprimanded" as such, but she hasn't written a Trek novel since.BRANNON BRAGA: Do you remember the book...the novelization of the Enterprise pilot, in hardcover, that came out around the time the show did, by Diane Carey that...It was very obvious in reading many passages that she hated the pilot script and was making her own metacommentary on the show? Do you remember this?
RICK BERMAN: I vaguely do.
BB: It’s filled with passages commenting on how shitty the script is. You know, like—I can’t remember exactly, but you know: “So Trip and Reed found themselves in front of two stripper girls eating butterflies. A ridiculous concept, even on an alien world.” I mean, just like…
RB: This is in a novel?
BB: (laughing) This was in the novelization. And just, like, commenting on how stupid characters were: “No good Starfleet captain would have done this, but Captain Archer was no ordinary Star Trek captain.” But, it was filled—and I don’t know if it was you or me called just to say “Hey, we think this is funny, but you should know that this author has…”
RB: “…that you’ve licensed…”
BB: Obviously, an editor missed the fact that she hates the show and it’s reeking with hatred from beginning to end. I don’t know or remember exactly what happened. I think maybe she was reprimanded. That’s absolutely true.
Sorry, but I got into Enterprise first by Carey's novelization of "Broken Bow" and Dean Wesley Smith & Kristin Kathryn Risch's "By The Book", and I really thought that Enterprise would be a good series based on the bar that all three of those authors set. I never saw "Broken Bow" the episode until the DVD was released in 2005 (but I had seen a few episodes from mid-season 2 and mid-season 3 thanks to someone recording them to VHS for me), and unfortunately the quality of the filmed BB episode and the other episodes were so far below the bar Carey, Smith & Rusch had set to question what garbage pile the producers had gone diving into to find and even shoot Enterprise. And even to this day I consider the books to be more true to the universe than the episodes.
To his perspective, the filmed pilot was like an adaptation of the novelization and we all know what that feels like, when an adaptation can match the story beat-for-beat yet it still seems off or "not as good" as your original experience reading the story.
I felt this way about the movie Watchmen. I loved the comic series and the movie was almost slavish in its adherence to the source material, but I still left the theater with a general meh feeling.
In this case, Watchmen was always more about the innovative techniques and format (sequential illustrated narrative) of the comic series than the substance of its base story anyway, but I can still empathize with someone that prefers their initial experience with a story over a secondary experience with that identical story, told in a new way.
It actually makes Carey look like an idiot that she couldn't do a simple transcribing job without adding her own personal biases into it. No wonder she never wrote a Trek book again after that.
To me, the Watchmen movie was simply the best comic book adaption I've ever seen. They even swapped out an ending that would only work in comics for one that worked perfectly in a film.
Whatever her reasons, it was a dick move from her.
What I don't understand is why Carey agreed to write the novelization for the pilot if she felt this way about the new series.
Maybe she was already on the way out as far writing Star Trek was concerned and this was some sort of lifeline?
Of course, that doesn't explain why she'd try to undermine the story by using the characters as a vessel for smart-ass commentary--as she had to have known doing such a thing would likely mean she'd never get to write Trek again.
It was the most literal adaptation I've seen, but I didn't consider it the best. Its visuals were too slick and stylized and processed. I felt that Watchmen called for more of a grounded, verite approach to the cinematography. I felt that Snyder was so fixated on recreating the surface look of the work that he didn't really capture its underlying tone and substance.
I did think the changed ending was a good idea, though.
No, she had plans for more Challenger novels and discussed them at the time. She certainly intended to go on writing Star Trek novels after Broken Bow.
Of course, that doesn't explain why she'd try to undermine the story by using the characters as a vessel for smart-ass commentary--as she had to have known doing such a thing would likely mean she'd never get to write Trek again.
She may not have known that. Or thought it was likely.
In my view, there was a failure all the way around. Her editor (I'm presuming it was Ordover) said this was okay. Paramount Licensing said this was okay. Yes, Carey wrote the snide commentary on the characters and their universe, but there were multiple points where someone with a red pen could have wiped that commentary out.
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