3 novels a year seems way too little.
The novel itself is most certainly legit. The only thing questionable is the release date, I wouldn't be too surprised if it were delayed a month or two. After all, SNW Ring of Fire, the upcoming TOS Identity Theft and Picard To Defy Fate have all had their release dates postponed by a month or two from the date that was originally announced, so a delay with this novel wouldn't be unprecedented.
Transport yourself across the galaxy with this collection of illustrated Star Trek adventures, adapted from classic fairy tales and narrated by Lieutenant Commander Data.
Once Upon a Stardate collects beloved fairy tales from around our world, retold within the Star Trek universe. Familiar stories such as "Pinocchio," "The Emperor's New Clothes," and "Hansel and Gretel" take on new meaning as Data writes futuristic Starfleet-inspired versions of old Earth classics in an attempt to understand, and convey to the next generation, humanity’s lasting connection to storytelling.
Data reimagines stories from his adventures, as well as from Starfleet records, to create his own versions of:
- The Three Little Pigs: La’An, Chapel, and Ortegas defend the U.S.S. Enterprise while the other senior officers are on an away mission
- Rip Van Winkle: Scotty is trapped in a transporter pattern for decades and rematerializes on a different U.S.S. Enterprise than the one he knew
- Jack and the Beanstalk: Wesley Crusher attempts to outwit Q in order to share high-tech seeds with a struggling community
- The Pied Piper: Garak helps a Cardassian outpost deal with an infestation of tribbles
- And many more!
Each of these eighteen tales features characters, locations, and events from across all 60 years of Star Trek and are brought to life with original full-color illustrations. The tales are supplemented by fourteen shorter fables that share wisdom from some of Starfleet’s best-known captains: Kirk, Picard, Sisko, Janeway, Archer, Pike, and Burnham.
That could be a lot of fun. I've never heard of Ten Speed Press, I'm assuming this is an official licensed release, and not just a fan thing?
It’s five years since the end of the Dominion War. Jake Sisko is back on Earth after a long journey round the Gamma Quadrant, finishing up his book about what life is like out there after the collapse of the Dominion. It looks like Jake has a great life—travel, success, and a writing career that’s going from strength to strength.
The only problem is—everyone wants a piece of Jake Sisko. Whether it’s Starfleet Intelligence, full of questions about his trip through the wormhole, or the Bajoran people, anxious to be close to the son of their departed Emissary, Jake is struggling to carve out space for himself.
Then there are the rumors Jake heard out in the Gamma Quadrant. Rumors about Starfleet, and his father, and their conduct during the war. Rumors which—if they turned out to be true—would rock the very foundations of Jake Sisko’s world…
Jake accepts an invitation to an arts festival on Cardassia Prime, hoping to get some distance between himself and his worries. But even here, the past won’t leave him alone. Starfleet Intelligence are still interested, and there are people on Cardassia, too, for whom Jake Sisko seems to offer unique opportunities to advance their agendas. Jake flees into the Cardassian desert, joining a tour of ancient archeological sites.
And then, when the party is isolated from the rest of the world, the murders begin…
Sounds interesting to me, plus it will be interesting to get some insight into post-finale DS9 in what I'm presuming is continuity consistent with the modern shows.
If I remember correctly, it was Avery Brooks who suggested the line about Sisko coming back in a year because he didn't want to fulfill the stereotype of a black man abandoning his pregnant girlfriend/wife.
Then again, if he came back “yesterday”, maybe that split off another timeline where there were two of him for a day and his family effectively never lost him, while in “our” timeline he never returns.Yes, though the line was actually "Maybe a year, maybe yesterday." There was uncertainty in how long it would take, but the intent was certainly not that he'd be gone long enough to miss seeing his new child grow up.
Then again, if he came back “yesterday”, maybe that split off another timeline where there were two of him for a day and his family effectively never lost him, while in “our” timeline he never returns.
True. Though I remember getting the possibly-unsupported feeling during his last scene with Kassidy that, seeing things from a higher level as he was now, “our” linear time was a bit more blurred and dreamlike for him now, and he was saying that it might be a year or yesterday because he couldn’t actually specify exactly when he’d reappear.I think that he'd more likely follow Starfleet temporal displacement protocol and just lay low for a day so as not to disrupt causality. After all, what good does it do to return in one timeline if there's still a timeline where his daughter grows up without a father?
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