Yeah, and there's hardly ever any discussion of the books there. I know it's in The Rulz that off-topic discussions are Bad (unless they're about fish puns, anyway), but a little slack never killed anyone.
The part of the Doctor Who books discussion that's relevant here is the fact that, once upon a time, Doctor Who was off the air and the books were full of experimentation and freedom and did lots of neat things, even starting books-only spinoffs starring original characters, and most of that came to an end when the new series started
In the mid 60s, "Batman" comics began to reflect the camp style of the Adam West TV "Batman".
(the convertible Batmobile, Catwoman's domino mask and catsuit, and the Barbara Gordon version of Batgirl).
I also wonder if the Reeves-Stevens are keen to do ENT Relaunch novels?
this is one of those threads i pretty much ignored when it started, who gives a crap about a guy bashing books i enjoy based on an excerpt. but i skimmed though it, ignoring anything over a paragraph, people, tighten it up, when somebody said something brilliant.
While I like M&M, I generally agree with the critique.
And that's not a book review so much as a criticism of their writing style.
Prose on the model of Hemingway would be far too spare for the market.
I was dismissing someone whose notion of book reviewing is to condemn an entire line of books based on a single excerpt in a giveaway
or‘NX-01 Enterprise, Captain’s Log, 15 April.
Following the mysterious attacks on the main civilian shipping lanes over
the past few weeks, it was easy for Starfleet Command to justify
diverting Earth’s two fastest and best-armed starships away from
their mission and out on continuous patrol. We are currently six
parsecs ahead of Columbia. All departments report we are ready for
action, keen to engage our unseen enemy. Indistinct. Long yawn.
Short yawn. Indistinct. No, don’t put that down. Oh darn.’
Captain Jonathan Archer sat up, his attention on the logbook for the first time. He got the device to delete the last twelve words then read the
entry back to himself. It served its purpose, he decided. He stored the entry. The desktop terminal chimed, waking Porthos, who glowered up at him.
‘Yeah?’ Archer told the terminal, more worried about finding a dog treat.
‘You look as bored with this mission as I feel.’ Erika Hernandez said, her voice cutting through the room.
Archer turned to the screen. The Captain of the Columbia was sat in her near-identical quarters in her near-identical starship, slumped in her chair.
‘I’m ready for action, keen to engage our unseen enemy,’ Archer told her. ‘It must be true, it says so in the ship’s log.’
He looked down at Porthos, who was settling back in his basket.
‘You can’t put that,’ Erika complained. ‘I’ve just put that. Those exact words. Starfleet Command will think you copied me.’
‘They’ll think you copied me,’ Archer corrected her. He’d walked over to the window. Columbia was somewhere in among the field of stars.
‘What are we doing here, Jonathan?’
Archer smiled at that. Here. There was nearly twenty light years between them. A generation ago, it would have taken decades for her message to travel the distance. A hundred years ago ‘here’ was one little patch on one little continent on one little planet. Millions had died fighting over lines on a map or lines in a book, thinking they were defending ‘here’.
Space had a way of putting that way of thinking in perspective.
‘This was Starfleet’s call to make, not ours.’
Without looking, he knew that had earned him a withering frown.
‘Both starships on a routine mission to - ’
‘Hey,’ he said, holding up his hand. ‘I’m an explorer, Erika. I don’t like babysitting Earth Cargo Service freighter convoys any more than you do.’
As he’d been talking, he’d been looking out at the stars. One group in particular. A constellation of nine. All green, arranged in a line. He recognised it as the Baraal Cluster. It was a thousand light years away. And the charts all said there were only seven stars in the Baraal Cluster. He’d discovered two new stars, just by looking out of the window.
‘But there are no routine missions out here,’ he said quietly. ‘How could there ever be?’
Blind taste test challenge, which of those is best?Admit it, Jonathan. You’re already at least as bored with this mission as I am.”
Unable to deny his fellow NX-class starship captain’s assertion, Captain Jonathan Archer smoothed his rumpled uniform and leaned back in his chair with a resigned sigh. Porthos, whom Archer had though was fast asleep behind him at the foot of his bed, released a short but portentous bark, as if voicing agreement with the woman who looked on expectantly from the screen. Archer turned away from the lone desktop terminal in his quarters just long enough to toss a small dog treat to the beagle, who immediately became far too preoccupied with the crunchy tidbit to tender any further opinions.
“My feelings really don’t matter all that much, Erika,” Archer said to the image on the terminal. “And frankly, neither do yours. This was Starfleet’s call to make, not ours.”
From across the nearly six-parsec-gulf of interstellar space that currently separated Enterprise and Columbia, Captain Erika Hernandez punctuated her reply with a withering frown. “All right. Who are you, and what have you done with Jonny Archer?”
His lips curled in an inadvertent grin. “I’m just an explorer, Erika. I don’t make policy. And I don’t like babysitting Earth Cargo Service freighter convoys any more than you do. But you’ve got to admit that there have been enough attacks on the main civilian shipping lanes over the past few weeks to justify keeping Earth’s two fastest and best-armed starships out on continuous patrol, at least for a while.
I have a more detailed post to reply later on -- I'm on my way out the door right now -- but the answer to this question is easy: the first one.Blind taste test challenge, which of those is best?
Actually, the second one is the original...I have a more detailed post to reply later on -- I'm on my way out the door right now -- but the answer to this question is easy: the first one.Blind taste test challenge, which of those is best?
There are some ways in which the second bit is better than the first bit, but there are two criteria that vault Andy & Mike's original over the rewrite: 1) their scene sounds like two people talking instead of two characters talking, and 2) (and this is the biggie) I hear the voices of Scott Bakula and Ada Maris in the first scene, and I don't even a little in the second.
1) He’s not ‘reviewing the book’, he’s making a general point about the line, using one passage as an example.
2) The reason that passage was in the giveaway in the first place was, presumably, to sway the undecided and show Star Trek fiction at its best.
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