• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Diane Carey?

Rush Limborg

Vice Admiral
Admiral
And, hello again, Trekkers, Trekkies, and Conversationalists all across the fruited plain!:techman:

Now...I wonder if any of y'all know whether or not Diane Carey intends to write more Trek. I read somewhere on this very site that she intended to start up a Challenger series, a sequal to the New Earth miniseries. What came of it? And how come we haven't got anything from her, Trek-wise, since the ENT "Broken Bow" novelization?

Any thoughts?
 
Y'know, people's lives head in different directions than they'd originally intended. "Life is what happens when you're busy making other plans," said John Lennon, and there's a man who knew of what he spoke. ;)

Carey went into politics. I know that at one point she was planning an original SF series. (Personally, I'd love to see Carey write nautical fiction.)

Different directions, like I said.
 
Fruited plain?

There was one Challenger novel, Chainmail plus the follow-up novella, and the series seemed to have withered on the vine after that. These days, Carey is too busy with politics to be writing Trek novels. Personally, I've never enjoyed her work (except First Strike), so no big loss.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Ah, Duckman! Good show, but it's been a while since I've seen it, so I don't recall that particular gag. Sorry.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Actually, Mr. Roman, it's America the Beautiful the song.:lol: You know, as in "For purple mountain majesties/ Above the fruited plain/".

Carey went into politics.

AH! Fascinating! Any chance we'll see her run for President someday? (Probably on the Republican or Libertarian ticket?)

Diane Carey, the first woman president...sailor, patriot, best-selling novelist, and to top it all off --A LONG-TIME STAR TREK FAN!:techman:

Has a nice ring to it....:)

I know that at one point she was planning an original SF series.

Hmm...a series that would be interesting to check out, no doubt! You wouldn't happen to know anything about it, would you?

Do tell!:D
 
Actually, Mr. Roman, it's America the Beautiful the song.:lol: You know, as in "For purple mountain majesties/ Above the fruited plain/".

A consultation with Wikipedia finds that this song is an American patriotic hymn (which I now realized the Duckman episode was titled after). Which explains why I don't know it, since I'm not American, don't do patriotism, and don't do hymns.

AH! Fascinating! Any chance we'll see her run for President someday? (Probably on the Republican or Libertarian ticket?)

She actually has to win an election first.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Ms. Carey is in politics. OK. May she let someone else write her speeches. For her sake.
 
Hehehe... I wonder if her stump speeches are as ridden with nautical references as her literature...

"My fellow Americans,

It has been almost four hundreds years since our brave forefathers placed their trust in the sturdy ship Mayflower and cast their lot over the oceans, searching for freedom and a better life beyond the roiling horizon of the grey Atlantic, buoyed by their faith. And while their physical journey came to a rest on the eastern coast of this, the land of opportunity, in many ways the ideological voyage they set upon has never truly ended. It carries on to this day in the hearts and minds of every man, woman and child who dare stands up and claim the liberty which is their due inheritence.

No one would claim it has been an easy voyage. We have been rocked repeatedly by great waves of social change, divided against ourselves by a mutiny belowdecks, and weathered the great squalls of the world at war. And looking at this great country today, I cannot but think that we have gone off course at some point. This is not the free, open sea we ought to be sailing; instead, we have run aground upon the shoals of government interventionism, and our hull creaks and groans beneath the burdensome weights of taxation and regulation. The moral rudder of our ancestors has split, the values which anchored them lost to the depths. Our captain, the presidency, does not guide the vessel with steady and light hand, but has become a veritable tyrant aboard ship, screaming his dictates across the deck with his legal cat o' nine tails, barging into our cabins and presuming to tell us how we should live our lives down to the smallest detail, far usurping his legitimate authority. Our politicians have forgotten that they are the mere midshipmen of this voyage, guarding against the threats of predatory sharks in the waters and bellicose thunderclouds in the distance. Yes, truly, at some point in our history true freedom was been cast overboard; our brave flag hangs limp in the doldrums of bureaucracy in which we have become mired.

Yet, hark! do not abandon ship now! Do you not see the sun shining on the horizon, glittering on the blue expanse before us? That is the future, my friends, and it waits for us to conquer it, if only we have the courage to stop this incessant, futile fiddling with the rigging and tack boldly into the wind. So join me now, and billow your sails with hope and determination! United, we can put remind the politicians that they are merely stewards transporting us towards the true fulfillment of the twin promises of freedom and independance, our bulkhead and bulwark. Watch those fears and depencies wou've been taught to cling to pass by to port and starboard, this bilge weighting our vessel down, and see them sink to the darkness of Davy Jones' Locker where they belong. Join me now, standing proudly at the bow of this great ship that is the American dream! Divided, we founder; but all hands working together, we can steer this beautiful vessel back onto its bearing, towards the promised shore once again!

God bless America!"

:evil:

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Last edited:
Wow, is that really what she writes like? If so it seems like I'm not missing much by not having read any of her stuff yet.
 
I spoke with Diane a few weeks back, when her Best Destiny novel was cited by the Trek movie writers as an influence on them. Some of her reply is in the latest issue of the Magazine, out now, and she did mention that she's working on a version of Final Frontier (her novel, not the Shatner movie!) called The Starship for a German fan group to film, who apparently previewed stuff about it at FedCon this year - I was there but didn't see any of it.

Paul
 
Wow, is that really what she writes like? If so it seems like I'm not missing much by not having read any of her stuff yet.

No, that's an exagerration; all part of the satire.

...well, except for Ship of the Line.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Now, I CERTAINLY hope I'm not in the minority here --I kinda like Carey's books.

Granted, she's no Peter David, but still....

And you gotta give her credit --she gave that insubordinate jerk, "Gallileo Seven's" Lt. Boma, what he DESERVED! See "Dreadnaught!", where it's revealed that Scotty had him busted out of the fleet! You go, Diane!:techman:
 
I liked Dreadnaught! and the sequel Battlestations!, when they first came out, but upon a recent re-reading, I discovered that they hadn't aged well for me. Where I liked Piper before, now I just find her annoying.

As for the likes of Ship of the Line, Red Sector, Station Rage, and the first New Earth (never bothered with Challanger or Chainmail), just... blech!

Like the Piper books, I really enjoyed the George Kirk books as a kid, but haven't re-read them in years and have no desire to.

And don't get me started on her WW2 Enterprise short story in Enterprise Logs...
 
I read a lot of her books when I was in early high school, but I've just now gotten back into the novels after several years off, and I just re-read First Strike. Now, it's the only Carey book I've read since I was able to form legitimate opinions, but I liked it a lot. Like genuinely a lot. She had a couple annoying tendencies, but so do most writers, and the story was well-plotted, the battles had clever tactics, the Furies had an interesting culture, and the dialogue was spot on.

Does she just get lazy or something?
 
"Final Frontier", "Best Destiny", and "The Great Starship Race" are some of my favorite Trek novels. I like "First Strike" as well.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top