Goes back further than that, truly, as the very first scene in The Motion Picture shitcanned the climax of Spock Must Die!Which is the way the novels have always worked since TNG started adding new continuity back in '87.

Goes back further than that, truly, as the very first scene in The Motion Picture shitcanned the climax of Spock Must Die!Which is the way the novels have always worked since TNG started adding new continuity back in '87.
Spock said similar with his "currents of time" speech in COtEoF. It's totally implausible, but it's one of those things in fiction I'm more than willing to play along with because it's so much fun. I love the idea that current day character X can hop through portal Y and end up in old series Z. I'm really excited to see a big budget, big screen multiverse crossover in The Flash movie. The idea of Michael Keaton and Ben Affleck both playing Batman in the same movie is bonkers.They did lampshade it in CoIE by having Lex say "The multiverse has a way of aligning fates," but that doesn't explain or justify it, just acknowledges it.
In a case like that, with multiple adaptations of the same property, you get multiple iterations of the same people and events with different worldbuilding. But realistically, it would more likely be the worldbuilding that was the common element and the people and events that were different.
Spock said similar with his "currents of time" speech in COtEoF.
It's totally implausible, but it's one of those things in fiction I'm more than willing to play along with because it's so much fun.
Maybe those things are "fixed points in time" that work across the whole multiverse, if you accept the "Doctor Who"-Style explanation that time is like a living beeing that selects certain events and makes them happen no matter what...
I'm currently writing something with a multiverse theme to it, and I'm having fun subverting the usual fantasy tropes of parallel universes and exploring some more distinctive possibilities arising out of more realistic quantum theory -- something fresher than just the same old cliches of people meeting alternate selves or Hitler winning WWII or stuff like that. Something that goes beyond slight remixes of the familiar world and delves into far more profound divergences.
Take my money please! This sounds amazing. I don't suppose you can tell anything more about it?
I assumed as much, but it never hurts to ask. I hope they announce soon. From those details it sounds exactly like the sort of story you excel at.Not until my publisher announces it. Hopefully soon.
Not until my publisher announces it. Hopefully soon.
Is it a Star Trek novel? Or can't you reveal that yet either?
It's something new. Heck, if it were Trek, I'd be stuck with their approach to alternate timelines, which is just the kind of thing I'm trying to avoid.
There's always been more to my writing than Star Trek. Especially now, with my Arachne duology finally released and this new project currently in the works.
Oh I don't know, the new continuity portrayed in the new shows is likely to still have a DTI - DS9 hasn't been overwritten.Yeah, I know. I was just curious. When you noted about alternate timelines I thought maybe we had a shot at a new DTI novel (though I guess in retrospect that's unlikely since I have a feeling the DTI will factor into the upcoming Coda trilogy in some way, and we'll probably need to see how that plays out first, and, well, I guess it's probably unlikely we'll see future DTI books once Coda is done since those were part of the relaunch continuity).
If you like historical fantasy, I highly recommend checking out David Mack's The Dark Arts series.I am curious about your other novels and some of David Mack's works in particular.
If you like historical fantasy, I highly recommend checking out David Mack's The Dark Arts series.
If you like historical fantasy, I highly recommend checking out David Mack's The Dark Arts series.
Thanks, guys!What he said.![]()
I'm currently writing something with a multiverse theme to it, and I'm having fun subverting the usual fantasy tropes of parallel universes and exploring some more distinctive possibilities arising out of more realistic quantum theory -- something fresher than just the same old cliches of people meeting alternate selves or Hitler winning WWII or stuff like that. Something that goes beyond slight remixes of the familiar world and delves into far more profound divergences.
Thanks, guys!
Yes, these books are amazing!If you like historical fantasy, I highly recommend checking out David Mack's The Dark Arts series.
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