70+ pages into it. So far so good. Should the Klingon ship be a D-6 versus a D-5?
70+ pages into it. So far so good. Should the Klingon ship be a D-6 versus a D-5?
70+ pages into it. So far so good. Should the Klingon ship be a D-6 versus a D-5?
I remember debating this, but can't remember why I reached the decision I did.
We didn't see any Klingon ships in "The Cage," obviously, so it seemed inconclusive . . . .
70+ pages into it. So far so good. Should the Klingon ship be a D-6 versus a D-5?
I remember debating this, but can't remember why I reached the decision I did.
We didn't see any Klingon ships in "The Cage," obviously, so it seemed inconclusive . . . .
The ship is described to have a bulbous prow, which could be the D-5 from TAS (= D-7 look-alike), but I chose to envision it as the D-5 from ENT.
Was this a way of maintaining consistency with your story Enterprise Logs - "Though Hell Should Bar the Way"?
Either way, it was still quite refreshing to get something other than the (slightly overused, IMO) D7 battlecruiser-class in this story; the VAN novella's dialogue was also right there in the back of my mind when I was reading this, which helped too.
In its small way, it helped to set this story a bit further apart, flavor-wise, as taking place in Pike's own earlier era specifically, as opposed to a 5YM-type flavor.
Either way, it was still quite refreshing to get something other than the (slightly overused, IMO) D7 battlecruiser-class in this story; the VAN novella's dialogue was also right there in the back of my mind when I was reading this, which helped too.
In its small way, it helped to set this story a bit further apart, flavor-wise, as taking place in Pike's own earlier era specifically, as opposed to a 5YM-type flavor.
As much as I recall, that was the basic idea. What's the point of writing a Pike-era novel if you're not going to milk the idea that this was somewhat before the FYM?
I wanted the book to have a slightly retro flavor. "Lasers" instead of phasers, "space ship" instead of "starship,' that kind of thing.
I note that Cyprians were also mentioned in Barbara Hambly's Ishmael, although I can't recall the context, or whether her Cyprians look anything like your Cyprians.
And the description of Cyprian ears immediately made me think of the woman pictured on the cover of Michael Jan Friedman's Fortune's Light. Who is evidently not a Cyprian, but it's been so many years since I read that book that I haven't a clue who she is, or of what species.
Hmm. And I'd also completely forgotten as well (which is why I haven't a clue about the context); it was only thoughts of the aforementioned cover painting that prompted me to do a Memory Beta search, and it was the results of that search, not my memory of the last time I'd read Ishmael, that told me about the reference to Cyprians therein.(I'd completely forgotten that there were "Cyprians" in Ishmael, which I last read back in the eighties.)
I wanted the book to have a slightly retro flavor. "Lasers" instead of phasers, "space ship" instead of "starship,' that kind of thing.
Not every Trek author has gotten those touches right - I am glad you did!
I had a question, though - not a criticism of your novel, more a really nitpicky thing I have noticed reading the newer novels alongside some older ones: When was it decided that the organization under whose auspices the Enterprise operates is "Starfleet" as opposed to "Star Fleet"?
Like I said - I know this is an incredible niggle. But I'm curious, and figured a professional Trek author would be as good a person as anyone to ask!
Still really enjoying the book... page 175 and going strong!
I wanted the book to have a slightly retro flavor. "Lasers" instead of phasers, "space ship" instead of "starship,' that kind of thing.
Not every Trek author has gotten those touches right - I am glad you did!
Honestly, I resist using "lasers" in the Pike era, because it's something Roddenberry himself decided was a mistake and abandoned. He figured that viewers would be savvy enough to recognize that real lasers wouldn't do the fanciful things that his show's weapons were capable of, so that he needed to change the name -- although we've since seen that audiences are either far less informed or far more forgiving of BS than he thought they'd be. I have no doubt that if Roddenberry himself had done a later story set in the Pike era, he would've called the weapons phasers. And of course they had phase pistols in the 22nd century in Enterprise. (There's also the fact that they were only actually referred to as lasers twice in "The Cage," both times in reference to the handheld pistols.)
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.