I think there's a passing reference to "Threshold" in Christie Golden's Marooned. Just a throwaway sentence.
(although I'm sure the book itself is great).
No it isn't.
I loved it.
I remember the framing story of "Best Destiny"-- a book I otherwise really enjoyed-- did a very ham-handed attempt to retcon the end of Star Trek VI. Where at the end of the movie they received word that the Enterprise-A would be decommissioned, and then the framing story (set immediately after the movie) has some emergency happen, and the Ent-A saves the day, so Starfleet decides not to decommission the ship.
^Yeah, I was always amazed that Paramount let Diane Carey get away with reversing the ending of the movie like that.
No, but it was their decision to write a book in which that death is reversed in a dumb way. They had the option of not trying to "right" the original "wrong" at all. Which was my point.I thought that the retcon in TGTMD was just fine. It's not the authors' fault that the Enterprise writers thought it would be a good idea to kill off a major series character in a dumb way.
It had nothing to do with Diane, it just happened to be in her book. Pocket wanted to be able to do post-TUC stories with the main crew, hence putting that bit in.^Yeah, I was always amazed that Paramount let Diane Carey get away with reversing the ending of the movie like that.
It had nothing to do with Diane, it just happened to be in her book. Pocket wanted to be able to do post-TUC stories with the main crew, hence putting that bit in.^Yeah, I was always amazed that Paramount let Diane Carey get away with reversing the ending of the movie like that.
I was thinking about to the fact that "Threshold," technically, is canonical. Has this ever been rectified at least partially through literature? Maybe Paris and Janeway had a weird dream or something?
I agree with Scott.
Something along similar lines was done in String Theory: Evolution with regard to Kes's portrayal in "Fury."
And Janeway's portrayal , Season 5 to--well, death, I suppose.
i agree with christopher about "the alternative factor", though i am interested in reading the "strange new worlds" story about "the alternative factor" christopher is referring to. its an odd episode to follow up on.
It's the very last story in the very last SNW volume, the appropriately title "Reborn" by Jeremy Yoder. It features Q bringing the casts of TOS, TNG, DS9, and VGR together to save the universe from the Pah-wraiths, and Lazarus is somehow the key to doing that. Yes, you read that right.
I thought that the retcon in TGTMD was just fine. It's not the authors' fault that the Enterprise writers thought it would be a good idea to kill off a major series character in a dumb way. The producers have even said now that the episode was a mistake (at least for the way it used TNG characters). I was also glad that the Enterprise-Relaunch (or whatever it's called) decided to move forward to the eventual Earth/Romulan War, which is the last major undocumented event in Trek lore that I can recall (except maybe the Federation/Tzenkethi war).
I agree with Scott.
Something along similar lines was done in String Theory: Evolution with regard to Kes's portrayal in "Fury."
And Janeway's portrayal , Season 5 to--well, death, I suppose.
I found the cure worse than the disease. Explaining her irrationality by prolonged stress, depression and guilt (actual character building!) would have been preferable to brain damage.
She's not a complex character, just a mentally disabled one! *shudders*
And what disease are we talking about? Is this about Janeway? I don't remember her having some kind of disease in the latter half of Voyager.![]()
As for Threshold, yes it was completely atrocious but it can be retconned by today's writers if they chose to do so. They're the best we've ever had.
Which is why we're smart enough just to ignore it.If the very people who wrote "Threshold" say it never happened, then that's good enough for me. If you like, maybe it was a holonovel Tom Paris wrote.
i agree with christopher about "the alternative factor", though i am interested in reading the "strange new worlds" story about "the alternative factor" christopher is referring to. its an odd episode to follow up on.
It's the very last story in the very last SNW volume, the appropriately title "Reborn" by Jeremy Yoder. It features Q bringing the casts of TOS, TNG, DS9, and VGR together to save the universe from the Pah-wraiths, and Lazarus is somehow the key to doing that. Yes, you read that right.
either that story is some how 1000x better than the premise suggests or standards really slipped at the end to allow that story in.
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