• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Mirror vs Myriad Universes

dispatcher812

Commander
Red Shirt
Trying to find something to read and decided to try the Mirror Universe. Then saw there was a Myriad Universe. What is the difference between the two? Also what is the difference between the Sorrow of Empire by David Mack in 2007 and the one in 2010? I am getting this information from wikipedia.org. Thanks. Kevin
 
Myriad Universes tells stories from other drastically different alternate universes than the MU or the regular universe. The 2010 novel of The Sorrows of Empire is an expanded version of the story that appeared in Glass Empires.
 
Hmmm, I see that now thanks. It looks like the Myriad ones look more interesting then Mirror. My next question, Can they be read out of order? Do they follow each other or are they completely on there own?
 
Each Myriad Universes short novel is a completely different standalone alternate timeline, not referred to by anything else. Three of these separate short novels are in each volume.

The Mirror Universes short novels all form a continuity, with David Mack's entry expanded to a full length novel (like DeVario mentioned). That continuity comes to an end in December with the novel Rise Like Lions, which will finish all the plot threads from the short novels.

Hope this helps.
 
The title Myriad Universes literally means "uncountably many universes," and it was chosen to express the concept that there are endless alternative possibilities -- although in a way that looks and sounds similar enough to Mirror Universe to make the sales department happy, given that the MU books were strong sellers. It let them be marketed as a variation on the same idea, even though their original editor Marco Palmieri was trying to get them off the ground well before the Mirror Universe project happened (and it wasn't until MU did well that Marco was able to convince Pocket to go ahead with MyrU).

"Myriad" can also mean "ten thousand," as in a myriameter, an obscure term for ten kilometers. But that's an archaic usage. Even if we went with that, there's still room for 3,330 more volumes in the series. (If we count the IDW Comics MyrU miniseries as a tenth installment.)
 
The Mirror Universes short novels all form a continuity, with David Mack's entry expanded to a full length novel (like DeVario mentioned). That continuity comes to an end in December with the novel Rise Like Lions, which will finish all the plot threads from the short novels.
Do we know for a fact that this is the end of the current MU continuity altogether? I know it's been promoted as the end of the current storyline, but I don't see why that means it has to be the last story in this version of the MU.
 
The Mirror Universes short novels all form a continuity, with David Mack's entry expanded to a full length novel (like DeVario mentioned). That continuity comes to an end in December with the novel Rise Like Lions, which will finish all the plot threads from the short novels.
Do we know for a fact that this is the end of the current MU continuity altogether? I know it's been promoted as the end of the current storyline, but I don't see why that means it has to be the last story in this version of the MU.

There are no more MU novels planned, AFAIK. Rise Like Lions will be the end of the current MU storyline. If someone wants to write another one, I suppose they could, but there are no such novels being considered at this time.

That being said, there is also nothing to prevent a MU-style storyline popping up in a future Myriad Universes collection. Or even a standalone novel - in a very real sense, Dark Mirror is an example of such a novel (since in it, the Terran Empire still exists, which in the current MU continuity is obviously impossible), and it was written years before.
 
Also what is the difference between the Sorrow of Empire by David Mack in 2007 and the one in 2010?

To answer this question here's an excerpt from my 2009 interview with David Mack:

The fact that the novel is an expansion of an existing story might lead to scepticism amongst readers as to whether the new version is worth buying. What, in David’s opinion, makes the new Sorrows a worthwhile read? “The first reason is that the new novel is more than twice the length of the original, clocking in at around 92,000 words.” But quantity isn’t everything, so David has made sure to improve the existing material, too. “In the course of adding new material, mostly in the form of new chapters, I have also taken the opportunity to streamline much of the original work. In some cases this was done to mesh old and new material; in other cases I was addressing stylistic issues, tweaking my word choices, or otherwise applying the lessons I have learned in the last few years since I wrote the original.”

The expansion has also given him the chance to explore some plot elements and characters which were sidelined in the short novel in more depth. “I’ve plumbed deeper into characters other than Spock,” he reveals, “and I’ve detailed at least one event from each of the 28 years spanned by the story. Marlena’s point of view is given greater examination, and I’ve worked to better integrate the characters who previously had made only cameos - in particular, Saavik and, to a lesser degree, T’Prynn from the Vanguard series.”
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top