^ Yep, Here Come The Brides.
Lenard's character in that series, Aaron Stempel, is said to be Amanda's ancestor
Good thing the crossover where the Doctor boarded another NX-class starship that RTD was mooting never happened.Now that I think about it, that really annoyed me. There is NO WAY that Doctor Who could EVER be part of the Trek universe - absolutely nothing matches at all, time-wise. There are NO pockets of history where the events of one series could possibly be part of the other.
Ahh, let's not forget the X-Men crossovers of the late Nineties...To the best of my knowledge, Ishmael is the only Trek/non-Trek crossover story that got professionally published.
I really liked it, too, as a kid (when I didn't pick up on any of the K/S overtones), and I own a copy of the "naughty" version. I remember thinking it was unfortunate that this was just a standalone, with Van Hise going to all that trouble to create an alternate timeline which would never be explored in any other novel.I absolutely loved Killing Time and started my own fanfic series based on it.![]()
Hm. I forgot about the X-Men one because I don't read comics. Or at least not superhero comics.Ahh, let's not forget the X-Men crossovers of the late Nineties...To the best of my knowledge, Ishmael is the only Trek/non-Trek crossover story that got professionally published.
I really liked it, too, as a kid (when I didn't pick up on any of the K/S overtones), and I own a copy of the "naughty" version. I remember thinking it was unfortunate that this was just a standalone, with Van Hise going to all that trouble to create an alternate timeline which would never be explored in any other novel.I absolutely loved Killing Time and started my own fanfic series based on it.![]()
In the Doctor Who universe, there could not possibly have been any starship Enterprise - the DALEKS were running Earth at that time!
There were two different versions of Killing Time?
But Mondas was destroyed...Well, actually, since it's established in both Star Trek and Doctor Who that perfect duplicates of Earth exist in the universe (Miri's World and Mondas, respectively), it could just be that the Doctor always visits an Earth, not the Earth. And one had an NX-class starship, and the other had a Dalek Invasion of Earth.In the Doctor Who universe, there could not possibly have been any starship Enterprise - the DALEKS were running Earth at that time!
Just guessing... if that was a genuine Whovian reference, it would have to be the Second Doctor and either Zoe or Victoria, since the Second Doctor is the only one who routinely carried a flute around.I forgot to mention the Doctor Who reference I just came across this morning, when Spock sees a young lady leaving the casino with a rumpled gentleman with a flute sticking out of his coat pocket. I wasn't even thinking to look for that and it popped right out at me. Plus, the wife and I only became Whovians in the past year or so, so it's extra impressive that I caught the reference.
Hm. I forgot about the X-Men one because I don't read comics. Or at least not superhero comics.
So it shared a number of fans with ST, obviously including Barbara Hambly.
But Ishmael was a mashup of a whole bunch of Westerns and SF series. I don't recall what other Westerns were homaged (maybe Bonanza?)
it could just be that the Doctor always visits an Earth, not the Earth. And one had an NX-class starship, and the other had a Dalek Invasion of Earth.
But that sort of thing does not belong in the pro novels.
In the Doctor Who universe, there could not possibly have been any starship Enterprise - the DALEKS were running Earth at that time!
Well, actually, since it's established in both Star Trek and Doctor Who that perfect duplicates of Earth exist in the universe (Miri's World and Mondas, respectively), it could just be that the Doctor always visits an Earth, not the Earth
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