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How strong is the restriction against using the Kzinti?

In the SFB world, the word "Kzin" is never used anywhere. One Kzinti but two Kzintis. Also, one Gorn but two Gorns. And they are Star Fleet, not Starfleet. There are other examples where ADB has intentionally diverged from CBS/Paramount.

Those barely even count as divergences. Heck, TOS itself used the "Star Fleet" spelling.
 
Star Trek Maps also included a whole bunch of planets from other sci-fi universes like Hivehom, Kobol, Krishna, Mongo, Mote Prime, Pern, Riverworld and Tran-Ky-Ky.
Not familiar with that book. I've got Star Trek Star charts, but never heard of Star Trek Maps. Maybe a game reference?
 
Thanks. Not sure how I could have missed it. Looks like it came right at the end of Bantam's license (I'm surprised; most of the stuff that wasn't narrative fiction came out of Ballantine before the beginning of the Pocket era, although there were notable exceptions, like the "Star Fleet Puzzle Manual" and the "Star Fleet Cooking Manual" (yes, it's a cookbook, and the preface includes a puzzle in the form of a FORTRAN program that was the purported food synthesizer algorithm for McCoy's favorite dish [if executed, as I recall, it prints out "CHICKEN 3.14159 SKEPTIC"]).

Used copies are all over the place in terms of price. Given that it has Humanx Commonwealth "Easter eggs" (I think most people around here already know I'm an ADF fan, awaiting By the Throat and Secretions with a proverbial worm on my tongue*), I can't exactly pass it up, so I just ordered one out of Alibris, at the cheapest price I could see anywhere.

____
* You know: "baited" breath.
 
I don't remember which work established the name of the Kzinti state as the "Patriarchy", but David Mack slipped in a reference to the Patriarchy in Mirror Universe - Rise Like Lions.
 
I don't remember which work established the name of the Kzinti state as the "Patriarchy", but David Mack slipped in a reference to the Patriarchy in Mirror Universe - Rise Like Lions.

In Known Space, the Patriarchy is the name of the central government of the Kzinti Empire (whose ruler is known as the Patriarch of Kzin). The term apparently originated in Ringworld in 1970. In Star Trek, the name was not used in "The Slaver Weapon" or in Alan Dean Foster's adaptation thereof. As far as I can tell, 1980's Star Trek Maps is the first mention of the "Kzinti Patriarchy" in a Trek context. Star Trek Star Charts includes an alien government called simply "The Patriarchy" as a callback to this, though it couldn't actually mention the Kzinti.
 
Just goes to show you need to be careful how you loan out your creations. In retrospect, Niven might not have been so willing to incorporate Known Space aliens into a Trek episode. He might've changed their name and appearance and not adapted the story quite so exactly.

Niven says that Roddenberry asked him to adapt that story. Niven's original pitch, which he mentions in one of his collections, was what ultimately became the Bey Schaeffer story "The Borderlands of Sol," which I've never been able to see as a Star Trek story.

Niven can't be that opposed to Star Trek; just a few years ago, he allowed John Byrne to use a Pierson's Puppeteer on a cover for IDW's Star Trek: Frontier Doctor mini-series.
 
Niven can't be that opposed to Star Trek; just a few years ago, he allowed John Byrne to use a Pierson's Puppeteer on a cover for IDW's Star Trek: Frontier Doctor mini-series.

That might be more about Byrne than about Trek. Byrne and Niven collaborated on Green Lantern: Ganthet's Tale, the Niven-plotted 1992 graphic novel that introduced the character of Ganthet. That comic has a Puppeteer on the cover too -- and a Thrint (Slaver), both depicted as Green Lanterns.
 
That might be more about Byrne than about Trek. Byrne and Niven collaborated on Green Lantern: Ganthet's Tale, the Niven-plotted 1992 graphic novel that introduced the character of Ganthet. That comic has a Puppeteer on the cover too -- and a Thrint (Slaver), both depicted as Green Lanterns.

True; when asked about it Byrne said he did it with Niven's permission. If Byrne wanted to do a Kzin comic book story and he asked Niven, Niven may well say yes. But if you asked Niven to use the Kzin in one of your Enterprise novels, he might blow you off entirely.
 
Thanks. Not sure how I could have missed it. Looks like it came right at the end of Bantam's license

Yes, their last Trek product. Here in Australia, "Star Trek Maps" went straight to the remaindered tables. We were doing fundraising for George Takei's star on Hollywood Boulevard at the time, and I bought a stack of shrink-wrapped "Star Trek Maps" sets for $4.00 each, several of which were placed into charity auctions and raffles. They raised a lot of $$$ for Takei's star.

I don't remember which work established the name of the Kzinti state as the "Patriarchy"

Niven & DiVono use "Kzinti Patriarchy" in the LA Times Syndicate's "The Wristwatch Plantation" daily "Star Trek" strip, but as noted by others, it's originally from Niven's from "Known Space" stories.

"Star Trek Maps" sneakily renders the terms as both the "Kz'nti" (sic), "Kznti Patriarchy" (sic) and even a "Kznti [sic] marker buoy".

The "Treaty of Sirius" is also mentioned in "Star Trek Maps" and "Crucible: Spock: The Fire and the Rose", but spelt "Syrius" in "The Wristwatch Plantation".
 
Niven & DiVono use "Kzinti Patriarchy" in the LA Times Syndicate's "The Wristwatch Plantation" daily "Star Trek" strip, but as noted by others, it's originally from Niven's from "Known Space" stories.

But that came after ST Maps. That was published in August 1980, and "The Wristwatch Plantation" was a 1982 storyline. The Kzin first appear in the Sunday, April 4 strip, and the Patriarch of Kzin (the monarch) is first name-dropped on April 8. The phrase "Kzinti Patriarchy" as a name of the state doesn't appear until June 24, 1982.


"Star Trek Maps" sneakily renders the terms as both the "Kz'nti" (sic), "Kznti Patriarchy" (sic) and even a "Kznti [sic] marker buoy".

(Checks) Holy off-brand knockoffs, Batman, you're right! I've had the maps for, egad, 36 years, and I either never noticed that or completely forgot it.
 
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