DitC's portrayal of Deltans was interesting; it was pretty much the only attempt in the novels to explore the sexual side of Deltan culture until I came along, and no doubt an influence on my efforts in that regard. However, I think it went a little overboard at the expense of continuity. If Deltans are so dependent on touch that being deprived of it kills them, how could Ilia survive her "oath of celibacy?" I could never quite reconcile that.
Which book or books do you have them appear in? I would be interested in seeing how similar or different they are from what I've seen so far.
I don't know about that. As I recall, it seemed kind of an odd idea even at the time. It made for an interesting story, but it was a fairly idiosyncratic portrayal of the Federation. Of course, back then, before TNG and the later series fleshed out the worldbuilding so much, there was a lot of room for flexibility in how writers imagined the Federation and the other cultures glimpsed in TOS. So there were a lot of idiosyncratic portrayals, and part of the appeal of the early novels was that multiple-choice nature, the way different writers filled in the enormous holes in early canon in such different and surprising ways.
The practice of using Warrantors is certainly a different way of characterizing the Federation than what I'm used to.
Yes -- it was referenced several times in TOS that officers were paid, that things were bought with credits, etc. And we saw a number of capitalist characters in TOS and TAS: the rich miners in "Mudd's Women," the money-grubbing Harry Mudd himself, the merchant Cyrano Jones, the rich-enough-to-buy-a-planet Flint, the wealthy philanthropist Carter Winston. There was never any question in TOS that money existed. It wasn't until The Voyage Home that "We don't use money" was first uttered (which, in retrospect, probably meant physical currency as opposed to electronic credit), and the moneyless economy wasn't established until TNG.
I guess I keep overthinking it when there's no need. The crisis on Centaurus was sparked off after a grumpy sentient had an argument with a malfunctioning ATM.
I'd forgotten that it did that. Most post-TMP novels in the '80s and '90s pretty much ignored Spock's character change in the movie.
I like it when tie-in fiction is able to provide cohesion between stories that are very different. Dweller connects TMP with TWOK, and characterizes Spock in a very satisfying way.
As I recall, Duane used the term "the Other" not for the proto-god, but for the Vulcans' awareness of the divine. At least, that was established in Spock's World, and it may have been mentioned in TWS as well. So it's not a coincidence, I think.
I'm glad to know that this will be picked up on in Spock's World. I had a try at skimming through The Wounded Sky, which I find is challenging for finding details like this. I get the impression that the protoGod has interacted or come into contact with a being or beings called The Others, which it says confirms Kirk's story about coming from another universe. And I get the impression that after mentioning these mysterious Others, it seems like it or they decide to apply that same name to themselves (as if they feel kinship in some sense to the Others from "our" universe and feel like they are the counterpart for there own...?). It would be neat if Dwellers was deliberately referencing the same Others who make contact with the protoGod.
@TheAlmanac Thanks for posting those earlier perspectives about DitC! I got a kick out of reading them.