I liked that DS9 was dealing with its own thing and wanted to see it continue to do that. It also doesn't help that I'm not a Destiny fan and the Typhon Pact doesn't hold much interest for me. So only having one DS9 book and for it to be part of a series I'm not interested in isn't the best for me...other then I might save a bit of money on Trek movies next year. We'll see when they come out how un-interwoven they really are, the less so the more likely I'll have a look at the DS9 novel.
My impression is that each one tells its own distinct story -- and the whole tetralogy spans a fair amount of time, so there's some separation between them -- but collectively they show the evolution of the Typhon Pact and its relationship with the Federation.
Margret Clark should be fired. She is destroying Trek single handily.
That's silly. In addition to all the other points people have raised, Margaret doesn't run the entire corporation. She has bosses who have their own preferences she has to take into account. So she's hardly "single-handed."
I really don't see why everyone's lumping TOS and nuTrek novels in the same boat. NuTrek is rather obviously a different animal than TOS, and really should be seen as its own series, as unique as, say, New Frontier or Corps of Engineers.
Quite true. Abrams Trek is not TOS. It has its own style, its own voice, its own distinct characters and backstory. It has much less continuity baggage. It's even set in an earlier time when the characters were younger.
Clearly tie-ins sell, obviously they wouldnt exist. But I wasnt saying that no one would buy these books, I was saying that the hope that loads of new readers would come into a book shop next year, looking for books based on the film they saw, therefore it is better to market them in a block and make an event of it, rather than make the schedule more appealing to the established reader base by varying the titles over the year, seems to be wasted effort, because, as you yourself say, barely anyone buys books anyway.
As others have pointed out, it's a matter of proportion. The Trek literary audience numbers in the tens of thousands, maybe. The movie audience is in the tens of
millions, so a "tiny" one percent of that would be hundreds of thousands, which is huge by book-publishing standards.
Your problem is that you seem to be thinking of these percentages in qualitative rather than quantitative terms. So you assume that a tiny fraction of
anything is always going to be inadequate. But you have to look at the actual numbers. A tiny fraction of a huge number is still a pretty big quantity. For instance, the Earth receives only about two billionths of the Sun's total energy output, which seems like almost nothing at all, but it's enough to keep the entire planet warm and drive all of its weather and biosphere, because it's "almost nothing" of a really huge quantity. Scarcity is relative.
I hope we don't watch plot threads left dangling or wrapped up too quickly in order to make the leap forward and get it in step with what is clearly Pocket's direction for 24th century Trek.
DS9's jump forward is pretty far - a good three to four years into the future. Are we, as readers, supposed to just gloss over the huge gaps in the characters' histories?
As Margaret put it at the post-
Destiny panel, she's "a vaudeville editor: always leave them wanting more." She leaves enough dangling to pique our curiosity for later stories that fill in the blanks. For instance, having me jump over Picard and Crusher's wedding and present them as already married at the start of
Greater Than the Sum. That way, the wedding story can potentially be told in, say, some future anthology.
By the same token,
Nemesis jumped the TNG characters forward considerably, and the questions raised by that jump spawned a whole 9-book series filling in the gap. Not to mention
The Lost Era filling in the gap between TOS and TNG,
Ex Machina and
The Darkness Drops Again filling in the gap between TMP and TWOK,
To Reign in Hell filling in the gap between "Space Seed" and TWOK, etc. A lot of Trek fiction has been about retroactively filling in time intervals that were jumped over. So why is it so shocking for the novel line to generate a time interval of its own?
Also I was curious as to why the Haynes Star Trek Technical Manual was not included on the list, I though the publisher was partners with Simon and Shuster on the project. Is it as simple as it just isn't under the Pocket umbrella?
Haynes is an independent overseas company doing its own thing. Pocket has to be connected to the project since they own the rights to do it, but Haynes is the company that's actually in charge of making the book happen, so they're the ones who'd have to provide any information about its progress.
How is the ST09 universe going to be branded on the books? Will it strictly be under the title graphic of "Star Trek" with the character images being from the movie, or will there be some other branding/subtitle/some other indication to say "hey, this takes place in the ST09-verse, as opposed to these others that are in the Prime (or whatever) universe?"
The Abramsverse books will have their own distinct title font, probably the shiny silver version seen in the movie publicity or something resembling it. Also, most likely, Abramsverse books will have the new cast and ship on their covers while Primeverse books will have the original cast and ship.
Considering DRGIII is writing the DS9r novel, whose to say it will be a jump forward. He could write the entire five years worth of stories in one book, based on the way he writes.
Someone asked if that was the case at the post-
Destiny panel, and the answer is no.
Full Circle already took that approach. It'd be kind of repetitive to do it again.
Sorry for my error there. But we still lose a month because of Treason. I do feel that reprints should not count as a month's book. Just release the reprint alongside a new book. That would solve that problem pretty well.
I don't think you could "just" do that, because the production pipeline is set up to work at a certain pace, and adding an extra book would cost a lot of money and inconvenience a lot of people. It would be far more difficult than you assume.