It's looking forward from where we saw him on screen instead of going backwards, but The Sorrows of Empire is a very in depth look at Mirror Spock.
I loved that one
It's looking forward from where we saw him on screen instead of going backwards, but The Sorrows of Empire is a very in depth look at Mirror Spock.
Really? The majority of the novel is about it.
Does the name, Charlie jog your memory?
The ending had a contemplative quality IMO - poignant but not sad or tragic.
By the epilogue, it's been 101 years since Pike's birth, and he truly had a full, rich life, and got to spend most of his years with a woman he loved, doing what he saw as important work. I seem to remember a story where he had a son with Vina, but I can't remember it it was mentioned in Burning Dreams.
What more could anyone ask for?
(also, in a way, Pike's life story was far *less tragic* than, say, Kirk's)
You're thinking of issue #61 from DC's second volume of Star Trek, "Door in the Cage." Spock returns to Talos IV to tell Pike about a new medical treatment that could restore his mobility. Spock discovers that Pike and Vina are doing better than expected and have even had a son together. It was a nice story.I seem to remember a story where he had a son with Vina, but I can't remember it it was mentioned in Burning Dreams.
Not entirely — Margaret also does a pretty through job recapping virtually all the Early Voyages issues near the beginning of the novel, discussing the missions involving races seen in the comics like the Ngultor and others prior to the 2250s sections of the book.IIRC, @garamet said that while she read every appearance Pike had made in the novels up until that point, she didn't get to research the comics that much. (I'm sure they would've been much harder to track down, especially if Margaret wasn't already a comics person.) There's a passing mention of Engineer Moves-With-Burning-Grace from Marvel's Star Trek: Early Voyages series in the book, but that's about it.
And Burning Dreams and Early Voyages offer up rather incompatible versions of Christopher Pike's father. I understand that Pike's fatheralso got at least a mention on this week's Discovery, too. (Please use Spoiler Text if you're going to discuss it in this thread, though. I'm still finishing up the first season, and I really don't want to have anything else spoiled for me.)
Haha, yes, that drives me nuts.I want to have a talk with whoever manages the sound design on DSC, because their salad-shooter approach to legacy Trek SFX is really disorienting).
I would, however, dispute that one point, and argue that Marshak and Culbreath (especially their "Omne" novels for Bantam) were far more fanzine-esque (and harder to follow).Black Fire is . . . perhaps the most fan-fictiony professional Trek novel ever published. . .
This isn't the first book to make that mistake. I read another Pike era book the other day, The Children of Kings, and someone mentions the Ferengi Commerce Authority.
I would, however, dispute that one point, and argue that Marshak and Culbreath (especially their "Omne" novels for Bantam) were far more fanzine-esque (and harder to follow).
I'm pretty sure the situation on Kaminar, that we saw during "The Brightest Star", was caused by Ferengi.
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/could-the-baul-be-ferengi.297874/
Yes, in their way (and so is Killing Time), but I think Black Fire has them beat for the sheer quantity of zineyness packed into one volume. Like I said, it feels like a whole series of novellas rather than just one story.
Seriously? You're still clinging to that bizarre hypothesis based on nothing more than Picard's throwaway line about the Ferengi finding their business associates "tasty" in "Encounter at Farpoint"? A line spoken by a man who, at that point, knew nothing about the Ferengi but rumors (and who was deliberately trying to scare Groppler Zorn off of allying with the Ferengi), and that contradicts literally everything else we've subsequently learned about what the Ferengi are actually like?
And even if there were any actual evidence that the Ferengi ate sentient beings (which there isn't), that wouldn't make them the only sophontophagous species in the galaxy by a long shot, so there'd be no reason to single them out as likely candidates. "Pretty sure" is something you only get to say about a hypothesis when you've considered every other possibility and ruled them all out.
Christopher, i found a few more clues for the Ferengi since you posted in my thread.
And i never pretended that the Ferengi would necessarily eat them. Just that they might have manipulated the situation to their advantage.
They might be taking Kelpiens to either sell them as foodstuff or as slaves.
I'm sure you did. If you start out with the conclusion you want and cherry-pick the evidence to fit it, you can "prove" any piece of nonsense, from "The Ferengi eat people" to "homeopathy works" to "the Moon landings were faked." It's backward reasoning. It only counts if you start with the evidence and determine which of all possible models is the best fit to all of it. So don't show me that you've found evidence to fit your preconceived notion. Show me that you've tried to disprove your notion and failed. Show me that your idea withstands evidence-based challenges better than all the alternatives. Otherwise you're wasting my time.
Your reasoning is incomprehensible. The original basis for your idea was the vague implication that the Ferengi ate people, and now you're saying that it's still the Ferengi even if you rule the bit that gave you the idea in the first place? That makes no sense.
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