Any books out there yet, or in the works, addressing the Post-Romulan galaxy and the consequences of the destruction of Romulus and Remus?
I've noticed that the novels seem to be jumping forward alot quicker than they had been in the past, and I'm wondering if that is because they are trying to get to the Romulus Supernova quicker.^Nope, not in the main Trek Lit continuity. That happens in 2387, and the furthest forward the Lit continuity has gotten to date is circa March 2383. The only book that deals with that timeframe so far is Star Trek Online: The Needs of the Many, which ties into the continuity of the online game and is unconnected to the main novel continuity.
If that was the case, couldn't they just jump straight to the supernova?I've noticed that the novels seem to be jumping forward alot quicker than they had been in the past, and I'm wondering if that is because they are trying to get to the Romulus Supernova quicker.
After Countdown, The Needs of the Many, STO, etc. all show their versions of the TNG/DS9/VOY universe continuing on well past 2387, it would be far from the "first" indication.Will it be covered, though? Cause if a post-Romulan galaxy is explored, that'll be the first indication that the Prime Universe had survived Nero's incursion to the past, and didn't dissolve because of it.
Because they want to finish up all of the story arcs that are going on right now. That would be my assumption at least. If my theory is the case, then I'm actually glad they're simply speeding up the passage of time instead of just jumping ahead like the DS9R and NF.If that was the case, couldn't they just jump straight to the supernova?I've noticed that the novels seem to be jumping forward alot quicker than they had been in the past, and I'm wondering if that is because they are trying to get to the Romulus Supernova quicker.
^It can't be Romulus's own star going supernova, or the planet would've been destroyed minutes later, and there would've been no time to try to organize the Red Matter solution.
Anyway, I don't think there's any rush to get around to this. There are still plenty of stories to be told about the current status quo in the novels before it gets upset by the supernova.
Where do you get the figure of 500 light years? That's never stated in the movie.
"129 years from now, a star will explode, and threaten to destroy the galaxy"rfmcdpei said:without annihilating the rest of the known galaxy
"He called himself Nero, last of the Romulan Empire"We still need them!
"129 years from now, a star will explode, and threaten to destroy the galaxy"rfmcdpei said:without annihilating the rest of the known galaxy
"He called himself Nero, last of the Romulan Empire"
And that Countdown and The Needs of the Many play loose continuity-wise both with each other (TNoTM mentions Nero attacking Vulcan in 2387) and STXI (in Countdown, Romulus is destroyed before Spock even launches - altough I suspect this is because of either an early STXI script being used as the basis of the plot or JJ's last minute tinkering with the movie's mind meld scene, which went on up until 2 weeks prior to the film's premiere)
Although that's strictly true, Spock's not known for hyperbole. In the early script at IMSDB (quoted simply to get an idea what the writers for aiming for), Spock says "A star in the Beta Quadrant will go supernova -- and like a cancer left untreated... it will grow... and destroy everything."Christopher said:Which could have been meant figuratively
Actually I'm not sure if Nero called himself that or if Spock applied that label. I went back and checked - I was wrong to put a comma in there when "Last of the Romulan Empire" is said in an overlapping, echo-y voice and not part of the "He called himself Nero" sentence.He called himself that, which doesn't mean it was literally true
That could merely be the part of the meld where Kirk's introduced to Nero.Countdown also has Spock and Nero as friends before the supernova while the movie dialogue suggests they never met.
Although that's strictly true, Spock's not known for hyperbole. In the early script at IMSDB (quoted simply to get an idea what the writers for aiming for), Spock says "A star in the Beta Quadrant will go supernova -- and like a cancer left untreated... it will grow... and destroy everything."Christopher said:Which could have been meant figuratively
Actually I'm not sure if Nero called himself that or if Spock applied that label. I went back and checked - I was wrong to put a comma in there when "Last of the Romulan Empire" is said in an overlapping, echo-y voice and not part of the "He called himself Nero" sentence.He called himself that, which doesn't mean it was literally true
That could merely be the part of the meld where Kirk's introduced to Nero.Countdown also has Spock and Nero as friends before the supernova while the movie dialogue suggests they never met.
Like it or not, Trek is fantasy dressed up in sci-fi colours. It has been from the very start. In Trek, supernovae sometimes can and do do that. Just like black holes are sometimes magical time portals.Although that's strictly true, Spock's not known for hyperbole. In the early script at IMSDB (quoted simply to get an idea what the writers for aiming for), Spock says "A star in the Beta Quadrant will go supernova -- and like a cancer left untreated... it will grow... and destroy everything."Christopher said:Which could have been meant figuratively
Which makes no sense whatsoever and wasn't in the film anyway. Supernovae don't work that way.
It's a mind meld, deliberately shot in a dream-like manner and not as a lecture. It could have easily been an echo of Spock's thoughts as he described the scene to Kirk.You're asserting a distinction that doesn't exist. Regardless of Nimoy's intonation, the only grammatically valid way to interpret "He called himself Nero, last of the Romulan Empire" is that it was what Nero called himself. If it had been Spock's characterization, he would've had to say "He called himself Nero, and he was the last of the Romulan Empire."
"Last of the Romulan Empire" not "Last of the Romulan people". Without their centralized seat of power, the Romulan Empire may well collapse.And again, it's clearly impossible that Nero would've been the last Romulan in existence, since Romulans are scattered all over space. Why waste energy trying to argue in favor of a completely impossible and nonsensical interpretation?
Again, it's a mind meld. He's only giving Kirk the essentials. That he may have had tea on Romulus with Nero weeks prior would have had no bearing on the current situation. Think of it like how they don't show every detail and even sometimes rearrange events on recaps of multipart episodes.That could merely be the part of the meld where Kirk's introduced to Nero.Countdown also has Spock and Nero as friends before the supernova while the movie dialogue suggests they never met.
No, it obviously isn't. Spock says it after Nero arrives at the supernova site.
Spock's not known for hyperbole
Like it or not, Trek is fantasy dressed up in sci-fi colours. It has been from the very start. In Trek, supernovae sometimes can and do do that. Just like black holes are sometimes magical time portals.Although that's strictly true, Spock's not known for hyperbole. In the early script at IMSDB (quoted simply to get an idea what the writers for aiming for), Spock says "A star in the Beta Quadrant will go supernova -- and like a cancer left untreated... it will grow... and destroy everything."
Which makes no sense whatsoever and wasn't in the film anyway. Supernovae don't work that way.
It's a mind meld, deliberately shot in a dream-like manner and not as a lecture. It could have easily been an echo of Spock's thoughts as he described the scene to Kirk.
"Last of the Romulan Empire" not "Last of the Romulan people". Without their centralized seat of power, the Romulan Empire may well collapse.
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