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Any Trek authors pitched a post Romulus story to Pocketbooks yet?

Occam's razor supports my position. To link Abrams' Product to the 'Primeverse' requires jumping through all those hoops and creating all those rationalizations,

There are no hoops or rationalizations required to conclude that Spock and the Narada originate from the Primeverse, or to conclude that the U.S.S. Kelvin existed in the Primeverse.

Yeah, I am a little bemused as to why creator's intent is being treated as so sovereign in this case.

Because you're talking about licensed fiction. They have to get permission from the owners of the property to do anything. That means that the creators' intent is sovereign, as the writers of the licensed books have to abide by what the creators intended in order to gain their permission to do the books.

I can understand that the current powers that be wouldn't be interested in contradicting it, that makes sense. But it won't always be the case...

1. The current "Powers That Be" are the only Powers That Be.

2. We have no idea how long Abrams and Co. will be running Star Trek for Paramount. It could last for decades for all we know.

3. Even if it does not, that does not mean that the people put in charge of Trek later on won't also require the novels to stay consistent with the idea that Spock and the Narada came from the Primeverse.

So, what if the books didn't get to 2387 until there was a new Sheriff in town? If we say, for the purpose of argument, that after one good trilogy, they decide to go with a total reboot and start all over from scratch for the next movie, would Abram's intent be so authoritative then?

That's an awful big "What If?" You might as well ask, "What if a giant ant swoops down from the sky and eats the White House while the President is off fishing?" It's a question that involves so much supposition and so many unknowns that it's effectively meaningless to try to answer it.

ETA:

Or, to put it another way; if somebody had written a story before 2001 about the World Trade Center being blown up, would that be considered optimistic?

It depends on the execution. If the story is about what really happened as a direct result of 9/11, no, I'd say that's not optimistic at all. If, on the other hand, you were to do a story about, say, an America where a different person is President, and he responds to 9/11 with radically different policies that spur genuine improvements in the world, then, yes, I'd say you can do optimism even in the wake of the destruction of the World Trade Center.

It all depends on how one responds to tragedy.

Sure we can rise from the ashes, but I think really the core optimism of TOS was that we got our act together before we had any really serious ashes to rise from. Averting the crisis instead of recovering from it.

Except that's complete and utter bullshit. Eugenics Wars? World War III? TOS and TNG both made it clear that humanity did not avert the crisis -- Humanity only got its shit together after inflicting a nuclear war upon itself and only barely avoiding extinction. Star Trek is fundamentally a story about how Human society has recovered from its near-suicide.
 
1. The current "Powers That Be" are the only Powers That Be.

Only until they are replaced by new faces.

2. We have no idea how long Abrams and Co. will be running Star Trek for Paramount. It could last for decades for all we know.

I say it now: two sequels maximum. And the third movie won't even be directed by Abrams or written by Kurtzman/Orci, they will just be producers.




The question is: how long will the Prime Trek literature last? It's turning into an entirely seperate thing now, since the Prime universe will not be continued in any canon form. And the next one after Abrams & Co won't return to it either. Highly probable is that there will be an attempt at a TNG reboot, that is either following Abrams' universe, or will be completely seperated. At that point, I guess, will the tie-in literature of the original Trek be gone for good.
 
Sometimes a space opera is just a space opera!

I agree with that, but I felt like Star Trek has generally been a bit more than just a space opera.

TOS was a smart space opera, as opposed to say, LOST IN SPACE or the original BATTLESTAR GALACTICA, but it was still a space opera.

Anyway, my point is that blowing up a planet, Krypton-style, does not always mean that a movie has to be seen as a bleak exercise in mass slaughter. I don't think anyone in their right mind would argue that SUPERMAN or FORBIDDEN PLANET are depressing movies about planetary genocide.

Sometimes an exploding planet is just a spectacular plot twist . . . .
 
You know, SUPERMAN: THE MOTION PICTURE began with a planet blowing up, annihilating an entire civilization, but I don't remember anyone describing it as genocide-chic or comparing it to Schindler's List.

It's possible to take this stuff too seriously. Sometimes a space opera is just a space opera!

But Krypton blowing up is part of what makes Superman Superman. He's lost one world and he doesn't want anything to happen to his adopted one. It's where he started, not where he is now.

Look back at the list of planets wiped out in Destiny.
http://memory-beta.wikia.com/wiki/Borg_Invasion_of_2381

That's a lot more than just Krypton blowing up.

Now that the Borg are no more how long will it be before someone decides we need another "big bad"? How long until someone decides that things need to be shaken up again and Trek needs to face a threat bigger than any that they've faced before? How do you top 48 planets destroyed or devastated and 63 billion dead?

Optimism doesn't mean that everything has to be better all the time. It doesn't mean that things are just better for me. It also doesn't mean that you have to tear someone down and leave them broken just so your heroes can swoop in and help them.

It's about finding a better way.
 
Optimism, in a work of a fiction, is also a question of tone, not content. SUPERMAN doesn't feel like a depressing end-of-the-world movie because it's a high-spirited comic book adventure that doesn't dwell on the billions killed in Act One . . .

Likewise, STAR TREK tends to be about heroic characters working together to overcome obstacles and save the day, regardless of how many planets got destroyed by the Doomsday Machine or Red Matter over the course of the story.

Which makes it feel optimistic to me.

It's all about how you handle it.
 
I didn't agree with that, either. I'm sure if I had been there in 1979, I'd be making this same point. :p

But the point is, within the Trek universe as it canonically stands, there's abundant precedent for Starfleet technology and costumes changing radically in a short amount of time. This movie hasn't done anything new or unprecedented here.


But if it's not going to look even remotely similar, why bother saying it's the same universe and time-frame? (Especially since we can assume they wouldn't slavishly commit to the old continuity anyway.)

I completely disagree with the claim that it doesn't "look even remotely similar." The shape of the Kelvin is very clearly that of a Starfleet vessel; it could never be mistaken for anything else. The layout of the bridge is the familiar one we've always known. Allowing for artistic license, modern technology, and the greater detail demanded by feature-film cinematography, the overall aesthetic of the Kelvin bridge strikes me as a reasonable approximation of something that might've existed in the same reality as "The Cage" but 21 years earlier.

And do you really not understand, after more than a year of rehashing this same tedious argument over and over, why they chose to make it an offshoot of the same reality? It's because they wanted to. Because they were trying to balance the need to create something new and free of continuity baggage with the desire to stay connected to the reality that had come before and pay tribute to it. That was their priority. They certainly weren't going to abandon it just because their costume designer and set designer used their imaginations instead of slavishly copying 45-year-old designs!



Yeah, I am a little bemused as to why creator's intent is being treated as so sovereign in this case.

Because this isn't the "Was Trek XI any good?" thread. This is the "How will Trek authors deal with the destruction of Romulus?" thread. As long as we're discussing Trek Lit -- which is the only thing we should be discussing here, despite how some people have completely forgotten what forum they're in -- it's a given that the Abramsverse will be treated as an integral part of the whole.


I can understand that the current powers that be wouldn't be interested in contradicting it, that makes sense. But it won't always be the case...

Again you're forgetting that, whatever your personal preferences, this is the most popular Trek movie ever made. They'd be crazy to want to contradict it.


So, what if the books didn't get to 2387 until there was a new Sheriff in town? If we say, for the purpose of argument, that after one good trilogy, they decide to go with a total reboot and start all over from scratch for the next movie, would Abram's intent be so authoritative then?

The books still incorporate TOS and TNG long after Roddenberry died. They still treat TNG, DS9, VGR, and ENT as canonical even though Berman, Piller, Taylor, Behr, Beimler, Braga, etc. are gone. It's all part of the same whole, and our mandate from the studio is to stay consistent with all of it. Even when we contradict the spirit of a story, as with "These Are the Voyages," we still stay consistent with the letter of what was shown onscreen. Really, you should know this by now. It's a silly question to ask. We're not going to change a sweeping, overarching policy just because you and a tiny smattering of others didn't like the movie.


Or then, they could've not blown up anything. It's not like the destruction of a planet was the only conceivable way to tell that story.

That's a meaningless objection. There's always more than one way to tell a story, but you have to choose one. This is the path they took, and it's obnoxious as hell to suggest that they were wrong to take it just because it wouldn't have been your choice. (And didn't we have this exact same argument a month ago? What is it with these infinite debate loops on the Internet?)


I agree. The whole reason that TOS was considered optimistic was not about the characters' attitudes (about the same as any other show), but the fact that it depicted a future where humanity hadn't blown itself up with atomic bombs, or killed itself off in petty wars, but instead had unified and learned to work together.

As Sci says, this is dead wrong. On the contrary, TOS and TNG depicted a future where humanity did blow much of itself up with nuclear bombs, leading the survivors to decide they'd had enough of that and needed to build a better world out of the ashes.

Roddenberry's optimistic view of the future was always built on a pessimistic view of the present. He always assumed we'd have to go through a very rough patch before we got better. Star Trek, Genesis II and Planet Earth all postulated a 21st-century war that devastated the planet to a greater or lesser degree, followed by the rise of a more utopian society from the ashes. G2/PE could almost have been his version of how ST's Earth recovered from WWIII, if the timing had been different. "Assignment: Earth" and The Questor Tapes both assumed that 20th-century humanity was such a mess that it couldn't survive without intervention from benevolent aliens. Roddenberry's whole body of work leaves little doubt that he was convinced we would blow ourselves up if left to our own devices, and that our capacity to improve ourselves would take so long to mature that it wouldn't happen until after the worst had passed.

(I like to think of G2/PE as an alternate timeline where Gary Seven and/or Questor didn't help ameliorate the chaos of the 20th century, so that when WWIII came, it was bigger and more destructive.)

Well, the Vulcans didn't blow themselves up, but even two people couldn't unify and work together enough to prevent someone else from doing so.

The Vulcans very nearly blew themselves up 2000 years ago, which was why they needed Surak to tame their fury. Again, a better world only arose out of the ashes of war.


Or, to put it another way; if somebody had written a story before 2001 about the World Trade Center being blown up, would that be considered optimistic?

If they'd shown the nation reacting to that tragedy in a positive way and defeating their enemies, of course it would. Heck, there have been countless movies that started with a huge disaster and ended with renewed hope. As I think someone said in an earlier post, optimism is needed most when times are hard.

Look at Independence Day. That's basically a disaster movie where aliens succeed in destroying major cities across the globe and killing millions of people. And yet the overall tone of its final act is one of great optimism and triumph.




Who would've enjoyed "The Doomsday Machine" if Kirk had figured out how to kill the thing after it had chewed its way through the Rigel system?

Who would've enjoyed it if Decker had figured out how to kill the thing before it destroyed his entire crew?


Don't get me wrong, I like TWoK well enough, but one can basically assume that all Meyer or Bennett knew about Khan was "genetic superman exiled by Kirk."

You're not researching your assumptions at all here, are you? It's well-known that Bennett and Meyer watched many episodes of TOS when they were hired to do the film, saw "Space Seed" in its entirety, and were intrigued by the hook at the end, deciding on that basis to do a sequel. So they knew as much about Khan as any Trek fan did. The changes from continuity that they chose to make were creative license. Now, you can disagree with their choice to make those changes -- heaven knows I've disagreed with it often enough -- but it's petty to assume the changes were the result of ignorance rather than creative interpretation.
 
It's not genocide that's overdone in Star Trek, it's spaceships. I mean, what the fuck? 700+ episodes, 500+ comics and 500+ novels and nothing but damn spaceships all the time. Even "Case of the Colonist's Corpse" mentioned them.

And you know what? Those bastards changed some of the spaceships. It's true. The one in "Spock Must Die!" isn't the same one as in "Maximum Warp, book 2" - and they don't even explain why they're different in either of the books!!

I hearby demand the future novels pretend the events of "Destiny, book 2" didn't happen, because it made me sad. In fact, I think it's an alternate universe from books 1 and 3, because words on the cover don't match.
 
There must be a "I hate Star Trek 2009" thread somewhere. Can't all this be discussed there?

I was simply looking for information on what is next in the TNG novels. We've had the events of Destiny. In my opinion, we don't need to cover 6 or 7 yrs of reconstruction over the course of a bunch of novels. Now lets see some stories just before the Hobus disaster. The Federation & Star Fleet are trying to resume exploration after a decade of conflict. Then maybe an expansion of the Hobus related events leading up to the disaster. Then move on to dealing with the aftermath.
 
Christopher said:
RookieBatman said:
Yeah, I am a little bemused as to why creator's intent is being treated as so sovereign in this case.

Because this isn't the "Was Trek XI any good?" thread. This is the "How will Trek authors deal with the destruction of Romulus?" thread. As long as we're discussing Trek Lit -- which is the only thing we should be discussing here, despite how some people have completely forgotten what forum they're in -- it's a given that the Abramsverse will be treated as an integral part of the whole.
I'm suprised that after 14 pages that includes posts by authors like you and Greg stating exactly why creator intent is "sovereign" why any would even ask that question anymore.
 
Bill, I'd like to know why you dislike the twenty-fourth century elements of Star Trek 2009? Did you hate the movie??
 
As Sci says, this is dead wrong. On the contrary, TOS and TNG depicted a future where humanity did blow much of itself up with nuclear bombs, leading the survivors to decide they'd had enough of that and needed to build a better world out of the ashes.

Roddenberry's optimistic view of the future was always built on a pessimistic view of the present. He always assumed we'd have to go through a very rough patch before we got better. Star Trek, Genesis II and Planet Earth all postulated a 21st-century war that devastated the planet to a greater or lesser degree, followed by the rise of a more utopian society from the ashes. G2/PE could almost have been his version of how ST's Earth recovered from WWIII, if the timing had been different. "Assignment: Earth" and The Questor Tapes both assumed that 20th-century humanity was such a mess that it couldn't survive without intervention from benevolent aliens. Roddenberry's whole body of work leaves little doubt that he was convinced we would blow ourselves up if left to our own devices, and that our capacity to improve ourselves would take so long to mature that it wouldn't happen until after the worst had passed.

(I like to think of G2/PE as an alternate timeline where Gary Seven and/or Questor didn't help ameliorate the chaos of the 20th century, so that when WWIII came, it was bigger and more destructive.)

The Vulcans very nearly blew themselves up 2000 years ago, which was why they needed Surak to tame their fury. Again, a better world only arose out of the ashes of war.

If they'd shown the nation reacting to that tragedy in a positive way and defeating their enemies, of course it would. Heck, there have been countless movies that started with a huge disaster and ended with renewed hope. As I think someone said in an earlier post, optimism is needed most when times are hard.

Look at Independence Day. That's basically a disaster movie where aliens succeed in destroying major cities across the globe and killing millions of people. And yet the overall tone of its final act is one of great optimism and triumph.

And yet we still have a Federation that's badly beaten, entire planets destroyed or badly damaged, billions dead. I'm not sure how much more of this kind of optimism I'd want to read.

I wouldn't call the end of Independence Day totally optimistic as they showed the alien ships crashed pretty much were they were. I'm sure a number of cities got flattened. Besides, it had even bigger plot holes that "the film that shan't be named in this thread".

Next TV series, Star Trek: The Post Atomic Horror
 
Bill, I'd like to know why you dislike the twenty-fourth century elements of Star Trek 2009? Did you hate the movie??

Could you please have that discussion in the Movies forum or in PMs instead of here?
I was just curious, but he was referring to a hypothetical post-apocalyptic ST novel that might deal with the Hobus supernova, so I was interested in what he would do to retcon the supernova out of existence.
 
There must be a "I hate Star Trek 2009" thread somewhere. Can't all this be discussed there?

I was simply looking for information on what is next in the TNG novels. We've had the events of Destiny. In my opinion, we don't need to cover 6 or 7 yrs of reconstruction over the course of a bunch of novels. Now lets see some stories just before the Hobus disaster. The Federation & Star Fleet are trying to resume exploration after a decade of conflict. Then maybe an expansion of the Hobus related events leading up to the disaster. Then move on to dealing with the aftermath.


It's probably worth pointing out that the mere presence of the Romulan disaster in the TNG timeline doesn't mean Pocket is obliged to devote umpteen books to its aftermath at the expense of other plotlines. No one is suggesting that Pocket spend the next few years cleaning up after the catastrophe.

After all, not every book set after KHAN dealt with the Genesis project.

Chances are, we'll treat the loss of Romulus like we've always treated any plot element from the movies. If we need it for our stories, we're free to use it. But if we want to write "The Return of the Giant Space Amoeba" instead, we'll write that book.

It's just fair game, that's all. Like Sybok or Q or the Gorns.
 
It's probably worth pointing out that the mere presence of the Romulan disaster in the TNG timeline doesn't mean Pocket is obliged to devote umpteen books to its aftermath at the expense of other plotlines. No one is suggesting that Pocket spend the next few years cleaning up after the catastrophe.

After all, not every book set after KHAN dealt with the Genesis project.

Chances are, we'll treat the loss of Romulus like we've always treated any plot element from the movies. If we need it for our stories, we're free to use it. But if we want to write "The Return of the Giant Space Amoeba" instead, we'll write that book.

It's just fair game, that's all. Like Sybok or Q or the Gorns.
Thanks Greg. I don't expect it to take up that much time. I guess I'm getting a little board with the latest TNG series. With the exception of Q&A, it feels like we've been on a Borg binge since Resistance. Now, we have books dealing with the aftermath. In fact, Losing the Peace is the next book in my stack. Cleaning up the events following Destiny is where I hope we don't get stuck for years to come.
 
We're still a few years (literally and figuratively) from that point, and for all we know the Typhon Pact may well help the Romulans without the Federation/Khitomer allies doing anything in the aftermath of Hobus.
 
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