It's a canard regularly tossed off to dismiss the professionals who write licensed Star Trek fiction. "It's just fanfic" comes across as an attempt to insult the work of Treklit writers.???
Seriously, what?
It's a canard regularly tossed off to dismiss the professionals who write licensed Star Trek fiction. "It's just fanfic" comes across as an attempt to insult the work of Treklit writers.???
Seriously, what?
It's a canard regularly tossed off to dismiss the professionals who write licensed Star Trek fiction. "It's just fanfic" comes across as an attempt to insult the work of Treklit writers.
What can I say? The first paragraph(s) come across as "Everything in Treklit was unmitigated shit until Peter David came along and Showed us the Light!!"
And, at that point, I quit reading your review, because Peter David's best Star Trek work was already in the past when he started writing New Frontier (Q-in-Law, I'm looking at you.)
If I might offer a suggestion, don't start your review of something you love by slamming stuff you don't love. Start by convincing me New Frontier is super-wonderful (which I'm not convinced of, but then I quit reading the series when the Excalibur blew up.)
It's also pretty insulting to fan fic, asserting it's so definitionally inferior to the canon you can just use it as a synonym for lousy stories that have nothing going for them but enthusiasm (and, even then, not the respectable kind of enthusiasm, but the kind that makes people say liking Star Trek is self-destructive to the writer). Hell, some of the most widely beloved TrekLit writers (including Peter David) were putting out fan fic before they got published.It's a canard regularly tossed off to dismiss the professionals who write licensed Star Trek fiction. "It's just fanfic" comes across as an attempt to insult the work of Treklit writers.
It's also pretty insulting to fan fic, asserting it's so definitionally inferior to the canon you can just use it as a synonym for lousy stories that have nothing going for them but enthusiasm (and, even then, not the respectable kind of enthusiasm, but the kind that makes people say liking Star Trek is self-destructive to the writer). Hell, some of the most widely beloved TrekLit writers (including Peter David) were putting out fan fic before they got published.
The context was being critical of Paramount's dismissiveness to the novelverse and praising the continuity of the New Frontier books. I said they should have been treated differently than something that didn't count. It was in the context of, "Paramount treated the novels as effectively licensed fanfic, which is a shame since they were often amazing."
I don't think that's fair to Paramount. They're under no obligation to acknowledge someone else's stories no matter how good they are. That's confusing two separate issues, continuity and quality. Many fictional franchises have multiple incompatible continuities, and they can all be equally good.
Besides, it's really, really hard to keep a canon consistent with its tie-ins, since it takes so much work just to create the canon that there's little room for anything else. In those few cases where canonical tie-ins have been attempted, it usually hasn't worked out -- like how the Dell Babylon 5 novels were meant to be canonical, yet all but two of them ended up contradicting the show and being designated apocryphal. It's hard to keep two simultaneous ongoing things straight like that, which is why canonical tie-ins are usually only possible for series that have come to an end so that their creators have time to supervise the literature (e.g. the Del Rey B5 novels, various Joss Whedon series, or the Avatar/Korra comics).
Lucasfilm/Disney is pulling it off so far with their current Star Wars continuity (though as far as I know, the screen continuity has yet to acknowledge anything specific to the current novel/comics continuity), but that's a rare exception and required them to create a whole department just to keep everything straight.
In pre-Disney Star Wars, George Lucas didn't consider anything outside of his movies and the CGI Clone Wars show binding (although he did borrow it and the Legends tie-ins were marketed as being canonical, or at least there being a "film/Clone Wars + EU" canon that existed alongside Lucas's film-only canon).
Star Trek: Discovery's team seems to be wanting their tie-ins to be in continuity as much as possible, irregardless of their actual canon status, which is pretty different from how all the other ones were not given much thought to.
Most franchises never even bother codifying what's in or out.
It wasn't that authoritarian. The holoconference scene that was in Doors Into Chaos, Demons of Air and Darkness, and Cold Wars was worked out in the bar at the Hunt Valley Inn in Maryland during the Farpoint convention in September 2000 among myself, Bob Greenberger, and Peter David. Bob then took our notes from that gathering and wrote a draft of the scene, Peter and I made notes, and then we each wrote our books. At the final stages, I went through each manuscript to make sure that we had remained consistent in the end.Unless I forgot something that was the one and only time something unique to the Relaunch appeared in NF. It was a single scene that appeared in all of the 24th Century, so I'm thinking he probably had to include it, and was probably told what to write so it would match up with the others.
Star Trek: Discovery's team seems to be wanting their tie-ins to be in continuity as much as possible, irregardless of their actual canon status, which is pretty different from how all the other ones were not given much thought to. Most franchises never even bother codifying what's in or out.
I mean, I hate to say "nullify" since the stories will still exist, but it's the best I can come up with as far as the new show is concerned, since some stories will not be able to exist within the current canon as it is created.
I like to say that if canon is history, tie-ins are historical fiction. They're just conjectures about what might have happened between the parts of "history" depicted onscreen. As we learn more of the "actual" history, it requires adjusting the historical fiction to follow suit.
I think it's pretty clear by now that Picard is establishing a version of history from 2384 onward that's very distinct from the novels. Certainly the continued presence of the Borg proves that it diverges from everything in the Lit from Destiny onward -- and the presence of one particular Borg contradicts Greater than the Sum.
Star Trek history, at least in my opinion as a fan, has always been something knit together like a quilt from numerous contradictory sources. So, I fully believe that people like you and John Jackson Miller, Dayton Ward, David Mack, and whoever else COULD if you wanted to--come up with something sufficiently quilt-like.
Fictional universes borrow from their non-canonical adaptations all the time. DC Comics borrowed Jimmy Olsen, Perry White, and kryptonite from the Superman radio show, Harley Quinn and Renee Montoya from Batman: The Animated Series, etc. Marvel Comics borrowed Phil Coulson from the Cinematic Universe. Doctor Who has done episodes based on a few of its tie-in novels and radio dramas, rewriting them into stories rather different from the originals. So borrowing isn't evidence of shared continuity, just of the fact that character and story concepts can transcend continuities.
And the marketing of the EU tie-ins as "canonical" was always a scam, or at best a misunderstanding of the term.
Whether tie-ins are in continuity with the source is a completely separate question from whether the source is in continuity with the tie-ins. As a rule, all tie-ins are expected to do their best to maintain continuity with screen canon. That's always been a given, certainly for Star Trek, and it does not imply that the reciprocal relationship is true.
That's because in most franchises, the tie-ins are not canonical by default. That's the normal situation, so it doesn't need to be "codified," it just automatically is. There are only a few exceptions, a few cases where an attempt is made to include tie-ins in canon, but those exceptions get more attention, giving fandom the false perception that the exceptions are the norm.
All you need to remember is that canon is about who the creator is, where the work comes from. Not what medium it's in, not whether some imaginary authority has "codified" it -- just who created it. Usually, tie-ins are only canon when they're from the original creators, because only the original creators are in a position to keep everything straight. And sometimes not even then.
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