They've never edited any books in the past to fit to canon, I don't think they'd start now.If SNW contradicts something in TOS or TOS novels, would the authors consider editing the ebook versions?
They've never edited any books in the past to fit to canon, I don't think they'd start now.If SNW contradicts something in TOS or TOS novels, would the authors consider editing the ebook versions?
If SNW contradicts something in TOS or TOS novels, would the authors consider editing the ebook versions?
Oh, yeah, that's right. And no one better ever write a book that takes place after TFF. Any author that did that would be put on my 'do not buy list'
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They've never edited any books in the past to fit to canon, I don't think they'd start now.
Wouldn't that be like editing Federation to make it consistent with First Contact?If SNW contradicts something in TOS or TOS novels, would the authors consider editing the ebook versions?
Wouldn't that be like editing Federation to make it consistent with First Contact?
The Disco reference in Available Light was a direct response to someone who gave me an "ultimatum" that if I ever included such references, they would stop buying my books.
Because that's what I think of "ultimatums."![]()
Sounds about right to me.This is an overgeneralization, but I think one difference between fans (at least certain types) and writers is that the fans think "I don't like that show/episode/character, so I'd rather not see more stories about them," while the writers think "I don't like that show/episode/character, so I'd better write a story that improves/redeems it." A writer is more likely to see a problem as something to be creatively solved than something to be ignored.
If SNW contradicts something in TOS or TOS novels, would the authors consider editing the ebook versions?
I remember the writer of the Q Continuum trilogy fixing continuity errors in one of the books for a reprint or something, because they featured Betazoids and Betazed had been recently conquered by the Dominion on DS9, and had flubbed the timeline, with regards to the Romulans? Or something like that.
Already did that, and hey! It’s the book with the Enterprise references.![]()
I probably wouldn't use a multi-verse explanation for everything.
For instance, in some earlier novels I find it best to treat it simply as a different way of looking at things. Before TNG and the other shows that followed they had a lot less to go on so things tended to go off in different ways.
Sometimes it's best just to treat it as different interpretations based on the same source material. Just looked at from a different lens. Not everything needs to be tied together neatly. In fact, with Star Trek, there are so many variations that sometimes it's best to treat them as apples and oranges, 2 different things.
Yes. The multiverse is a concept that's useful within certain stories. It's not something outside of or above those stories. It can be a fun exercise sometimes to try to fit different stories together into such a scheme, but it shouldn't be taken too seriously or treated as some absolute requirement. Stories don't have to be "real" relative to each other. You pretend a story is real while you're reading or watching it, but you don't have to pretend every other story is real at the same time.
And really, a lot of the time, the idea doesn't really work, not unless you're willing to throw out every bit of logic about how parallel universe would operate. Presumably alternate timelines would all have the same laws of physics, the same overall cosmology in terms of what planets and species exist, the same history up to the point of divergence. But with science fiction, all that is variable from story to story, so it's hard to find two independently created SF continuities that can really fit together in those respects. I've tried to justify various Trek novels with continuity issues as being parallel timelines, but I've found it's rarely feasible, because the inconsistencies aren't the kind of things that could plausibly be explained that way -- e.g. physical phenomena follow different rules, the same alien species is asserted to have different biological traits or planetary conditions, etc.
I've even tried and usually failed to justify my own original SF universes as alternate timelines to each other, because I tend to posit them having different physics, different species, different galactic histories, etc. They're just different works of imagination, based on incompatible postulates. Each one is its own distinct reality, and that's all that's needed. Indeed, that's part of the fun of SF, the ability to define the most fundamental parameters of reality differently in different works.
Sometimes a multi-verse makes sense, sometimes it doesn't.
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