Magazine publishing is different from book publishing, I guess.
To an extent, but there are far fewer short-fiction magazines now than there used to be.
Magazine publishing is different from book publishing, I guess.
TOS novels seem to be evergreen…thank goodness!
Someone should do a timeline of every TOS novel, comic, video game, with day for day placements (doing '24' Jack Bauer style cramming where necessary) ever made for the past 60 years (yes I'm including Gold Key comics in this count even) alongside TOS and TAS. (Contradictions can be handwaved with Q showing up for a mindwipe every time the crew goes on their "final" mission of the 5 years) I have a feeling that it'll all come out to a LOT more than what you can fit into 5 yearsTOS novels seem to be evergreen…thank goodness!
Someone should do a timeline of every TOS novel, comic, video game, with day for day placements (doing '24' Jack Bauer style cramming where necessary) ever made for the past 60 years (yes I'm including Gold Key comics in this count even) alongside TOS and TAS. (Contradictions can be handwaved with Q showing up for a mindwipe every time the crew goes on their "final" mission of the 5 years) I have a feeling that it'll all come out to a LOT more than what you can fit into 5 years
This should actually be the setting for any Paul Wesley led SNW sequel show, not the Year One that the SNW showrunners keep tossing around, to be honest. It's just wide open room after TMP for stories to go wild I think.I always assumed that the "second five-year mission" came between TMP and TWOK.
I'd second that. Except that there's a <we don't have that emoji>-load of novels also set in that period. So it's not quite wide open.This [a second 5-year mission between TMP and TWOK] should actually be the setting for any Paul Wesley led SNW sequel show, not the Year One that the SNW showrunners keep tossing around, to be honest. It's just wide open room after TMP for stories to go wild I think.
IIRC, back in the eighties, it was a common fanon idea that, after the five year mission of TOS, there was a second one, that fans used to account for the real life aging of the actors come TMP. Then official canon, come TNG and on, settled on there only being about eighteen months between TOS's five year mission and TMP, which ultimately threw a lot of the "second five year mission" stories back into the TOS time frame, only adding to that potential headache.
I always assumed that the "second five-year mission" came between TMP and TWOK.
And as for short stories, well, if you don't give a damn about getting any revenue for it, you can always put it up on your web site. Which I've only done for the one "free sample" short story. (Note that the "free sample" is not ST, and not even science fiction, that I've put nothing in this thread itself that can be construed as a "story idea" (unless giving away a free sample is itself a story idea), and that it's already a published opus, and not just by being on my web site; it's also in the PIPORG-L archives, and in at least one AGO Chapter Newsletter.
I'd second that. Except that there's a <we don't have that emoji>-load of novels also set in that period. So it's not quite wide open.
Someone should do a timeline of every TOS novel, comic, video game, with day for day placements (doing '24' Jack Bauer style cramming where necessary) ever made for the past 60 years (yes I'm including Gold Key comics in this count even) alongside TOS and TAS. (Contradictions can be handwaved with Q showing up for a mindwipe every time the crew goes on their "final" mission of the 5 years) I have a feeling that it'll all come out to a LOT more than what you can fit into 5 years
This really shocks me, I would think there be a lot of appeal to shorter stories that can be read in just a few short sittings. I know that anthologies are around the same length as a novel, but it's a lot easier to read one or two short stories in anthology and stop, than stopping in the middle of a full length novel.I can't speak for S&S or Trek in particular, but, in terms of book publishing in general, anthologies and short story collections are notoriously hard to sell -- and have never sold as well as novels, regardless of genre. They're more labors of love than smart business.
Indeed, I recently stumbled onto a vintage book review from the 1920s that cited the "well-known" publishing truism that short-story collections don't sell.
I'm not sure that would work quite the way Year One is meant, I think the idea behind that is that they can just keep going from where Strange New Worlds ends. And the idea of jumping back and forth between the SNW cast, The Original Series cast, then back to the SNW cast, then back to the TOS cast again, would really mess with my head. At least with Year One, we'd pretty much a continual flow of the SNW cast into the TOS cast.This should actually be the setting for any Paul Wesley led SNW sequel show, not the Year One that the SNW showrunners keep tossing around, to be honest. It's just wide open room after TMP for stories to go wild I think.
This really shocks me, I would think there be a lot of appeal to shorter stories that can be read in just a few short sittings. I know that anthologies are around the same length as a novel, but it's a lot easier to read one or two short stories in anthology and stop, than stopping in the middle of a full length novel.
IIRC, back in the eighties, it was a common fanon idea that, after the five year mission of TOS, there was a second one, that fans used to account for the real life aging of the actors come TMP.
Well, not really. It was TMP itself that had Kirk mention "my five years out there," not ten, followed by two and a half years as Chief of Starfleet Operations. So the fan notion of a second pre-TMP mission was revisionist to begin with.
I do kind of wish the canon had gone with that idea too, to make the time between the end of the series and the first movie more like the actual time span IRL. The characters look like they've aged more than 4 years between "Turnabout Intruder" and TMP.
Not to mention it would work much better to fit in those novels that seemed to take place 7-8 years after a specific TOS event, but was still apparently set pre-TMP.
It's not like Star Trek has never ignored a single throw-away line before. This one can even be rationalized:
Someone should do a timeline of every TOS novel, comic, video game, with day for day placements (doing '24' Jack Bauer style cramming where necessary) ever made for the past 60 years (yes I'm including Gold Key comics in this count even) alongside TOS and TAS. (Contradictions can be handwaved with Q showing up for a mindwipe every time the crew goes on their "final" mission of the 5 years) I have a feeling that it'll all come out to a LOT more than what you can fit into 5 years
How manyHow many years have Archie and Co. been in high school? How many mysteries did Nancy Drew or the Hardy Boys solve in their teens? How many elaborate "perfect murders" would Columbo really encounter in his career? How many high-profile murder cases, featuring innocent people unjustly accused of homicide, did Perry Mason win?
How manyyearsdecades have Beetle Bailey, Killer, Rocky, Zero, Plato, Cosmo, & co. been privates, Snorkel a sergeant, and Halftrack an old, bald, gray-fringed brigadier general?
I'll add that by comparison, the lack of promotions in ST seem hardly noticeable.How manyyearsdecades have Beetle Bailey, Killer, Rocky, Zero, Plato, Cosmo, & co. been privates, Snorkel a sergeant, and Halftrack an old, bald, gray-fringed brigadier general?
Plus the aesthetics are so much fun!This should actually be the setting for any Paul Wesley led SNW sequel show, not the Year One that the SNW showrunners keep tossing around, to be honest. It's just wide open room after TMP for stories to go wild I think.
As an obsessive timeliner, I can genuinely say *do not try it*. That way lays madness. The Maquis tangle alone is paradox enough to drive a man mad; trying to reconcile the timelines to TNG, DS9, and VOY is an exercise in futility- even Voyager, internally, contradicts itself (there ain't no way Kes is 3 years, 2 months old in Before and After when at least 6 months of episodes have passed since she was said to already be 3...)Someone should do a timeline of every TOS novel, comic, video game, with day for day placements (doing '24' Jack Bauer style cramming where necessary) ever made for the past 60 years (yes I'm including Gold Key comics in this count even) alongside TOS and TAS. (Contradictions can be handwaved with Q showing up for a mindwipe every time the crew goes on their "final" mission of the 5 years) I have a feeling that it'll all come out to a LOT more than what you can fit into 5 years
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