Dude, you owe it to yourself to learn profanity in any language. You know, for purely scholarly reasons, of course.Well, I'd certainly like to see them in print, as I only speak and read English and Profane English, with a smattering of Klingon.![]()
Dude, you owe it to yourself to learn profanity in any language. You know, for purely scholarly reasons, of course.Well, I'd certainly like to see them in print, as I only speak and read English and Profane English, with a smattering of Klingon.![]()
awesome news indeed I'm so glad more people will get to read the Promethus books.
They had to translate it in order for someone to approve it. I don't think that an English release was always guaranteed, but likely.It was always stated it would be translated from Deutsch into English and would be available as an ebook at some stage after the initial release given the need to translate it.
Kind of reminds me of the tests that Simon & Schuster did in the mid-1990's with the classic Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew books where they allowed copies of omnibus books that were printed by Armada/Collins for the British/Canada-excluded-Commonwealth market (as Grosset & Dunlap and Simon & Schuster held the US/Canadian rights to both series, and on the British-Commonwealth markets Armada/Collins had published several omnibus editions quite successfully) onto the US/Canadian market to see if there was interest in omnibus releases of the both series. Unfortunately it appears that the test was a bust, but it was the cheapest way for S&S to test the waters. A few years later, closer to 2000, S&S did print a few omnibuses on their own from each classic series spin-off series, but these only lasted for a maximum of 3 books (and most only got 1 book; the Hardy Boys Casefiles was the one series that got 3 omnibuses) before cancellation.That may be true for original US Star Trek novels. But as I said: Cross Cult has the rights to publish "Star Trek Prometheus" worldwide. That includes the US market. They could print and distribute novels on their own. They just don't have the ressources for doing that, so if they don't find a partner somewhere they will stick to the ebook-only option.
Also, for those that read it, does this mesh with the Pocket Books TrekLit 24th century universe, or is it more standalone?
Meshes completely. The authors are fans of the continuity and took pains to adhere to it while avoiding easy contradictions by Anglophone authors that wouldn't have read the series.
President sh'Kellesar is a personal highlight.
So maybe S&S and CBS are using the Prometheus trilogy as a test to see if books written in a foreign language and then translated to English have a market in the US-Canada.
S&S might have a right of first refusal so far as publication in the US (they're paying a hefty fee for the rights they've licensed, after all). There likely was some discussion somewhere about how best to proceed.
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