The Debrune teral'n is most plausibly read by me as an icon proving that one has a right to rule, a physical metaphor of one's right to rule. Nero having a right to rule the RSE by taking the teral'n from the murdered Praetor is not unlike a thief having the right to rule the United Kingdom if he stole the British Crown Jewels. Only someone with a vested interest in the individual in question and/or someone unbalanced would accept such a tranfer of power through such irregular and illegitimate means.
No thanks. With the way the books are coming out now we'd only get between 3-5 books in each series before they reset themselves again. I think the only reason they do that with the comics is because they have a ton different series all coming out once a month, so things become very complex very quickly. I just don't think Trek Lit is complex enough that something like that would really be viable.I think the novels need to learn a lesson from comics and reboot every five to seven years. Been tired of the current direction of most of the Pocket line for a while now and am to a point where I hardly buy any books.
No thanks. With the way the books are coming out now we'd only get between 3-5 books in each series before they reset themselves again. I think the only reason they do that with the comics is because they have a ton different series all coming out once a month, so things become very complex very quickly. I just don't think Trek Lit is complex enough that something like that would really be viable.I think the novels need to learn a lesson from comics and reboot every five to seven years. Been tired of the current direction of most of the Pocket line for a while now and am to a point where I hardly buy any books.
I think the novels need to learn a lesson from comics and reboot every five to seven years. Been tired of the current direction of most of the Pocket line for a while now and am to a point where I hardly buy any books.
I would much rather the stories grew and the characters always stayed the same.
He refuted that with respect to the 23rd-century Romulus of his current timeframe. I don't see that as being incompatible with his speaking for Romulus of the ex-future.Besides, Nero publicly reputed such a claim himself. "I do not speak for Romulus."
Seriously? That pretty much goes against one of biggest elements of long term stories. Part of the whole reason we follow characters for long periods of time is to witness their growth.You know I never saw a reason for Star Trek to change. When Micheal Piller came on board and said I can make your characters grow, I just never saw a reason for that. I would much rather the stories grew and the characters always stayed the same.
Yeah, and what's cool about Nero is his working-class personality. "Hi, Christopher, I'm Nero." That's just such an awesome departure from the pretentiousness and bombast of so many SF villains. It makes him more relatable. He's not a prince or a monarch, he's just a working guy who lost everything he loved.
I think characterization moving forward is something that is actually more or a double-edged sword than people think. Yes, it's great to see characters grow and change as well as their journeys. However, it is VERY easy to ruin characters and take away what was good about them.
I'll use one from a recent book. Ironically, of course, by his creator (who has the right to do this)
To quote a Vulcan proverb, "I ****ing *HATE* what they did with Xyon of Calhoun." I was really invested in the Kalinda/Xyon relationship and felt what they did to him was just plain vile. It left me feeling more than a little unhappy about the direction of the book series as a whole.
People become very emotionally invested in characters and hate when they are changed in a way they feel isn't organic or in a way that seriously hurts their investment. It's why shipping wars exists in other media. If you were really invested in Worf/Deanna Troi for some reason, Riker and Troi might bother the hell out of you.
It's human nature to want to have characters remain consistently the people you believe them to be.
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