The Chronology is not canonical gospel. It's an interpretation, like anything else. It states explicitly that its interpolations of events between canonical episodes and films are merely conjecture and are not meant to stifle other people's creativity. (Note that some of the STC's conjectures were contradicted by later canon. The first edition put Cochrane's first warp flight in 2061, and First Contact made it 2063. And it put the end of the 5YM in 2269, but Voyager later established that it was 2270.)
Fair enough. Maybe what I should've said was that, going off of memory, the
Chronology dates didn't seem to leave a window for a second mission. I tend to assume that the
Chronology is accurate except where it contradicts the TV shows, so that's personally the thing I filter the novels through. Your mileage may vary, as always.
But there is absolutely no reason to discount further missions post-TMP, whether a 5YM or Crucible's 7-year mission or something else. It makes zero sense to assume that Kirk, immediately after fighting passionately to get out from behind a desk and reclaim starship command in TMP, would then abruptly give it up again and spend the next 12 years doing nothing but sitting behind a desk. The more reasonable assumption, and the one that's been all but universally accepted by tie-in authors working in the period, is that there was a years-long post-TMP mission before Kirk went back to the admiralty.
Okay, fiar enough. (Wonder how Kirk talked the brass into it, given that his leading the V'Ger mission was supposed to be a temporary thing?)
Just because the First Frontier timeline and the Forgotten History timeline both lack humans, that doesn't require that Vulcan history had to go exactly the same way in both. It's quite egocentric to assume that human existence or nonexistence is the only factor that could possibly affect Vulcan history. It's quite possible that in the FF alternate history, the Kir'Shara was never lost, or the Syrranites managed to rediscover it without Archer's help. I established in Uncertain Logic that the Vulcan aggressiveness of the High Command era was the result of cultural and political influence by Romulan infiltrators; if history had been altered in such a way that that infiltration never happened, then the Vulcans would not have gone down that path to the same extent. There are countless ways it could've gone differently.
Good points. The line that always lodged in my head was when Kirk and Spock are discussing the effect that humanity's absence on Vulcan history would have, and Spock says that it would be minimal, at best. While it's not Diane Carey and James Kirkland's fault that the ENT TV show had humans play a key role in Vulcan history, that line still cracks me up, since in "reality," it's a very real possibility that Vulcan history went a different path than the TOS norm.
I also didn't really like the books whole suggestion that without humans, the Galaxy was plunged into war without end. I suppose it upped the stakes, but it didn't really seem to make that much sense.
I already gave the reason -- because PAD said there was one in The Captain's Daughter, and a lot of modern-continuity books have referenced TCD.
Okay, fair enough.
For me, if a book contains an overt, major contradiction with canon or the novel continuity, then I simply count it as separate. I only refer back to older novels that I feel are still consistent. Other novelists seem more willing to reference elements of older books that do have inconsistencies, but I see that more as paying homage than anything else.
Cool.
I guess I don't mind "recanonizing" (so to speak), older books with discrepancies, if the discrepancies are minor enough that they can be glossed over without too much trouble or undermining the original story (case in point, the aforementioned
First Frontier novel feels generally consistent with the novel-verse, even if we have to squint in a few places).
TWOK/TSFS are 2285. TWOK is generally assumed to begin on March 22, since Kirk's birthday is equated to Shatner's. So TSFS is probably in April. TVH is explicitly 3 months later, so maybe July '85. The trial takes an unspecified amount of time, but it's unlikely to be months, and the book The Genesis Wave contains a reference setting it only a couple of weeks after the main events of the film. The interval between TVH and TFF seems very short, but Harve Bennett has said there was a 6-month shakedown cruise between them, so that pushes it to January or February 2286. I just can't see pushing it all the way to 2287. The Chronology's conjectural dating of the movie era has never made sense to me.
Kudos on your research, first of all.
I'm not sure if the March 22 birthdate is that useful. Yeah, it was used in an Okudagram in "In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II" (ENT), but said Okudagram also had other discrepancies and was hard to read, so I don't consider it "binding," the way I would if the specific date was mentioned in dialogue (like First Contact's exact date, in the movie of the same name).
The March date does make hash with the
Chronology, which puts the TOS movie trilogy at the end of the year. It also doesn't mesh with the intended conversion of the Kelvin timeline stardates, which put Chris Pine's Kirk's birthdate on Jan. 4 -- albeit possibly slightly premature -- (also, a case in point reason why I don't think the Kelvin stardate conversion is "real").
If, hypothetically, we were to assume that we didn't know when Kirk was born (since the two possible dates are both mutually contradictory
and of really questionable canoncity and accuracy in the first place), do you think the
Chronology's dating makes more sense in this regard?