I disagree. I want to see something new. Take me to the "strange new worlds" and show me things we haven't seen before. For me that was a HUGE appeal of TOS and continues to be when I read and watch good science fiction.
I don't disagree, Warped9.
One of my concerns with
Titan when it began was that it didn't live up to what Marco had billed it as -- "
TOS in the
TNG era." I asked him at a convention how he could balance that tagline, which implied strange new worlds and all that rot, with a series that kicked off with a sequel to a movie, a sequel to a novel, and a sequel to an episode in its first three novels.
TOS had shown us new stuff all the time, while
Titan appeared to be "kisses to the past." Marco's answer was that audience today expect more continuity than they did forty years ago, and that a sequel to
Nemesis was unavoidable because any
Titan series was going to have to deal with the ship's mission to Romulan space. (And I admit that
Orion's Hounds isn't really a sequel to "Farpoint," though at the time I asked the question
Orion's Hounds hadn't been published and what little we knew about the book was the starjellies.)
I guess it's a question of how you
use the past. Is it an excuse
for the story, or is it a springboard to
another story?