Hi. I had a question about the DS9 Millenium Trilogy novels. Are there any books out there that are compatible (or mostly compatible) with the alternate future described therein?
Hi. I had a question about the DS9 Millenium Trilogy novels. Are there any books out there that are compatible (or mostly compatible) with the alternate future described therein?
Unless you're super anal about the details, I think the epilogue of "Inferno" fits with the post-series DS9 novels.Okay. I was hoping there'd be something out there that was compatible with the trilogy's basic timeline, if not in terms of its specific events (i.e. the destruction of DS9 and the 'War of the Prophets') then in terms of the setting/layout of things as presented in the epilogue of the trilogy's final book, Inferno, but it doesn't sound like there has been.
Only in as much as Trek makes up one gigantic broad strokes universe, where elements such as Kirk's academy years can be swapped out between MJF's "My Brother's Keeper" trilogy, Shatner's "Collision Course" and the old DC comic without it really mattering to the overall Trek tapestry.Another question: are there any novels or stories out there besides the officially recognized Trek Lit Mirror Universe stuff and the 'Shatnerverse' books that could be grouped together into a basic consistent AU timeline/continuity?
^That sounds suspiciously like what Trelane was trying to do in "Q-Squared"![]()
Okay. I was hoping there'd be something out there that was compatible with the trilogy's basic timeline, if not in terms of its specific events (i.e. the destruction of DS9 and the 'War of the Prophets') then in terms of the setting/layout of things as presented in the epilogue of the trilogy's final book, Inferno, but it doesn't sound like there has been.
Another question: are there any novels or stories out there besides the officially recognized Trek Lit Mirror Universe stuff and the 'Shatnerverse' books that could be grouped together into a basic consistent AU timeline/continuity?
Okay. I was hoping there'd be something out there that was compatible with the trilogy's basic timeline, if not in terms of its specific events (i.e. the destruction of DS9 and the 'War of the Prophets') then in terms of the setting/layout of things as presented in the epilogue of the trilogy's final book, Inferno, but it doesn't sound like there has been.
I'm sorry, I don't understand what you're asking. As far as I know, nothing in the epilogue of Inferno is fundamentally incompatible with the timeline of the post-finale DS9 novel series, at least not if one interprets the epilogue a bit flexibly.
Another question: are there any novels or stories out there besides the officially recognized Trek Lit Mirror Universe stuff and the 'Shatnerverse' books that could be grouped together into a basic consistent AU timeline/continuity?
That's really a question for each individual reader to decide for oneself, I think. Different people have different ideas of what's compatible and what isn't. And it's a lot more fun to use your imagination and build your own timelines than just to let someone else tell you what to think.
Although one could make a case for the '80s novel continuity that was developing for a while until TNG's emergence put the kibosh on it. The books weren't entirely consistent with each other, but they increasingly referenced each other and built on each other's characters and ideas. That continuity is discussed in the thread The Continuity of Days Gone By, in which I did my best to assemble a comprehensive list of the works that mutually tied into that continuity and give a rough chronological ordering for them.
And of course there are the distinct continuities of various Trek comic book series.
Unless you're super anal about the details, I think the epilogue of "Inferno" fits with the post-series DS9 novels.Okay. I was hoping there'd be something out there that was compatible with the trilogy's basic timeline, if not in terms of its specific events (i.e. the destruction of DS9 and the 'War of the Prophets') then in terms of the setting/layout of things as presented in the epilogue of the trilogy's final book, Inferno, but it doesn't sound like there has been.
This. And what Christopher said about flexibility in interpreting said prologue. EDIT: IIRC, the epilogue is a little fuzzy about its own dating. Furthermore, it definitely does not explicitly say that Sisko has not returned from the wormhole. So, if you want, you can read it as referring to Sisko temporarily being off-planet.
Although one could make a case for the '80s novel continuity that was developing for a while until TNG's emergence put the kibosh on it. The books weren't entirely consistent with each other, but they increasingly referenced each other and built on each other's characters and ideas. That continuity is discussed in the thread The Continuity of Days Gone By, in which I did my best to assemble a comprehensive list of the works that mutually tied into that continuity and give a rough chronological ordering for them.
KingDaniel: I'm reminded of General Grievous from Star Wars.
Do the Grigari cough and splutter pathetically as they advance?![]()
Given that one of the major themes of Millennium is how the Celestial Temple exists outside of time and can intersect with multiple timelines, I don't think there's any problem with making it compatible, even if the details don't add up.
If it's really troubling you, then the Nasat invites you to join his Star Trek Instrumentality Project(The Deranged Nasat previously tried to combat continuity failings by raging, frothing and threatening brutal violence with his axe. However, this short-sighted approach failed to prevent various continuities branching out and splitting off from one another. Now we have the Prime Verse, the Abrams Verse, Star Trek Online, the Shatnerverse, Crucible, etc. Each of them alone. Isolated. Crippled by their inability to truly integrate. It's tragic. The Nasat must combat this, and thus has changed his tactic. The Star Trek Instrumentality Project will collapse all barriers between distinct continuities, bringing about the reintegration of all Trek).
^That sounds suspiciously like what Trelane was trying to do in "Q-Squared"![]()
It also sounds like the process may involve turning people into tang.
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