And of course, recent Litverse novels have picked up and run with this general interpretation of Number One's future "backstory" -- in Legacies: Captain2Captain, we learn that she took command of the Yorktown at some point after she and Pike left the Enterprise (prior to 2267), and that she's being considered for promotion to the rank of commodore.His version of Number One as the nameless commodore in command of the Yorktown has been featured in several of Byrne's works, including his photo comics.
I'm wondering, depending on how Book III turns out, how her insubordinate actions in this trilogy are going to affect that possible promotion; in the Byrne comics she's been promoted by 2270, but Purgatory's Key could still end up going in a completely different direction than this.
I think you can probably do it -- Untold Voyages #1 opens immediately (mere seconds) after the final moments of TMP where the Enterprise jumps to warp, and appears to cover a very brief span of time, and also overlaps a bit with Debt of Honor, showing the starship backtracking V'Ger's course to Earth near the Klingon border. Since Ex Machina opens around two weeks or so after TMP, it looks like there's some elbow-room there, from glancing at the first couple chapters in the novel.Untold Voyages doesn't fit with the novels in its portrayal of post-TMP events such as Saavik's upbringing. (It might be possible to reconcile issue 1 of Untold with Ex Machina if you squint some, but I'm not sure.)
Pretty much, yeah -- about the only bits that aren't "pure" Litverse are the bookending 24th Century prologue and epilogue, showingI think I've heard people say that there's not really anything in Ashes of Eden that would prevent it from being part of the novelverse. That's purely second hand though, since I haven't read it myself.
James T. Kirk's remains getting stolen off of Veridian III by the Romulans, leading straight into the events of The Return.
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