Re: MyrU: Shattered Light Review Thread
Anyway, I thought it was (to coin a phrase) fascinating to see Vulcan treated as a savage, unknown alien world being explored for the first time.
Thanks! When my writing group read the first draft of the manuscript, without the benefit of back cover blurbs or such, knowing only that it was an alternate
Star Trek, it was fun to see the moments where they first figured out what 40 Eridani A II actually was.
And to see humans as a minor power in a majority-Andorian civilization, pretty much in the same position as, say, a Vulcan character in Prime-universe Starfleet would be. A very engaging alternate premise.
Yeah, these bits were fun to write.
Star Trek's (budget-necessary) humanocentrism bothers me sometimes, so exploring a
Star Trek that was aliencentric struck me as an interesting way to undermine that. I liked dropping in little references to the way Andorians had handled things humanity had also handled.
I was struck by all the homages to characters from various Trek tie-ins -- Phelana from My Brother's Keeper, M'Giia from the Starfleet Academy game, s'Bysh from Sarek, even "th'Rellvonda," a re-spelling of Threllvon-da from The Klingon Gambit. Was Big Lan a previously established character anywhere? (Though I assume I don't have to wonder about the origin of "Yrrebneddor th'Eneg." Grooooaaaannnn...)
I think
Myriad Universes is more fun if you get to see alternate versions of established characters, and there are precious few canonical Andorians, and not even any big-name noncanonical ones in the 23rd century, so pilfering some of my favorite Andorians from other tie-ins seemed like a fun thing to do. And I've had the "th'Rellvonda" retcon in mind for ages, so I was happy to get to slip it in, even if this presumably isn't the same guy. (I assume this th'Rellvonda is the other's son.)
Big Lan is not a pre-established character. Many years ago, I went through Ian's
Andor Files site and broke each proper name into a first half and second half, and then wrote a program to combine them at random to generate new names. I pulled it out again for the book. So "Thirrilan" is from "
Thirishar" and "Ig
rilan", for example. Th'Rellvonda's first name has the same source.
As for th'Eneg-- sorry.

A friend of mine invented the character for a
Star Trek RPG he never actually joined, and I used him as an NPC in it anyway, and ported him over into continuity here. I tried to get through the novel without using his first name, but eventually it became needed. You're the first to catch it, though!