I know it well!, John the author helped with the Appendices on 'We have engaged the Borg' and is working with me on our next project, a History of the Development and service of the Galaxy class Starships.Is anyone else reading/listening to this? I want to cry it's so good!
Is anyone else reading/listening to this? I want to cry it's so good!
Hi there... sorry to be nitpicky. But I just finished reading chapter 3 and I think there's an editing issue that kind of broke my immersion. Was President Barreuco meant to be male or female? Eric, Erick and Erica are all names that are used. And the President seems to be referred to using both male and female pronouns in multiple instances.
The website. SorryDamn, I thought I'd caught all of those. Which version is that: the PDF or the website? (One of those is easier to fix than the, uh, other)
Yeah, I noticed that one in the PDF, too, last year. It looks like someone has already reported the find-and-replace turning ISB into MIS also turning "disbanded" into "dMISanded."The website. Sorry![]()
No worries! The website is the easier one!The website. Sorry![]()
@CanSoc Let me join the chorus in saying that, while I have just discovered your work, I absolutely adore it. Everything about the tone and the narrative feels so very right, like I am reading a real-world history book.
It's very difficult to single out individual things, but I will try.
For me, I think it's how you've worked in various characters from different sources (some of which I haven't heard of and presume are your own creation) and using their perspectives to advance the plot by making it about them. I always find this kind of narrative historical storytelling very appealing. Particularly, the narrative about President Barrueco, "Uncle Shu" and Rittenhouse all feel very authentic. I also admire how you wove ENT/DSC/TOS together cohesively, and the glimpse into the innerworkings of the Federation, particularly the struggle around what Starfleet's role is and fights over allocations for shipbuilding.
Making all the shows work together - especially Discovery - was the most difficult, and most rewarding part of the project. It would have been so easy to ignore or retcon it, but trying to align it with the existing alpha and beta canon was, quite frankly, incredibly fun, and I'm quite proud of the result. Inventing new characters - and filling out existing ones - was just as much fun too. "Uncle Shu" and Rittenhouse were my guilty pleasures for Book One; I'm really looking forward to making you root for Nancy Hedford and Nilz Baris in book two!
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