As always it is great to hear your perspective, Kirsten. I'm glad you never want Voyager to turn out the way Deep Space Nine did, leaving us hanging to this day.
I am contracted now to write the next book after Atonement
Hey folks,
I think, for the most part, the original question has been answered, but just to confirm...
The real issue to me isn't that Voyager is moving too slow. It's that the Alpha Quadrant series are moving too quickly. I would welcome a return to the slower pace that the original DS9 Relaunch had. Why rush and skip over months and years of story time.
As always it is great to hear your perspective, Kirsten. I'm glad you never want Voyager to turn out the way Deep Space Nine did, leaving us hanging to this day.
You've forgotten to list all the VOY novels, Synthesis, Seize the Fire, Fallen Gods, Indistinguishable From Magic, and Absent Enemies. Also, The Light Fantastic, The Collectors, Disavowed, Lust's Latinum Lost (and Found), The Missing, and Armageddon's Arrow can probably be reasonably predicted in the timeline.EDIT: I was just looking through the timeline on Memory Beta, and the gaps really aren't as big as I was thinking they were.
The real issue to me isn't that Voyager is moving too slow. It's that the Alpha Quadrant series are moving too quickly. I would welcome a return to the slower pace that the original DS9 Relaunch had. Why rush and skip over months and years of story time.
This is definitely the big problem from where I'm sitting. The issue is in the way that the Alpha Quadrant stories are barreling forward in the timeline - I feel like we've only done these brief 'check-ins' with the characters involved, as they relate to the plot, rather than focusing on the crew, the characters. The senior staff of both the Enterprise and DS9 are at a point that I really am not certain who's who and who goes where. I feel like there's a desperate NEED for there to be stories set pre-The Fall for these characters. The only characters who've stood out on the Enterprise for me are Trys and Dygan, and I know Smrhova (did I spell that right?), but I really can't say I know much about her character. And I'm not even about to attempt to try and list the non-series crew on DS9 who weren't introduced in the ongoing post-finale DS9 novels (so, basically, anyone beyond Ro and Prynn, plus Bashir and Sarina).
It's felt almost like the novels that are set in the Alpha Quadrant have been plot-driven over character driven. And the plot sent events forward by two or three years, while the characters were still set where they were - that was definitely the feeling I had with 'The Poisoned Chalice.' It felt like two weeks or so had passed since 'Fallen Gods' for the characters, not around two years. Frankly, I'd love it if, for at least a couple of years, the novels that come out that are set in the 24th century Alpha Quadrant were set pre-The Fall, just to make it so that we can get to know these characters (and I am STILL desperately desiring an anthology about the DS9 years between 'The Soul Key' and 'Destiny, which could incorporate at least a few of the new faces on DS9').
It's what I've come to really love about the Voyager novels, that so far, they HAVE been slower in the plot shake-ups and heavy on the characters. Things happen, and then the next book picks up on those things and focuses on them. And while I get that it has to do with the fact that the Voyager novels have only one writer while the others have been various others, I still think it's something that they could pick up on in some ways. If nothing else, I'm game for like loose duologies written by the same author in each series, to introduce plot points and let them grow and evolve for two books before reaching a resolution. Just something to allow more of a character-based focus, instead of a plot-based one.
The real issue to me isn't that Voyager is moving too slow. It's that the Alpha Quadrant series are moving too quickly. I would welcome a return to the slower pace that the original DS9 Relaunch had. Why rush and skip over months and years of story time.
This is definitely the big problem from where I'm sitting. The issue is in the way that the Alpha Quadrant stories are barreling forward in the timeline - I feel like we've only done these brief 'check-ins' with the characters involved, as they relate to the plot, rather than focusing on the crew, the characters. The senior staff of both the Enterprise and DS9 are at a point that I really am not certain who's who and who goes where. I feel like there's a desperate NEED for there to be stories set pre-The Fall for these characters. The only characters who've stood out on the Enterprise for me are Trys and Dygan, and I know Smrhova (did I spell that right?), but I really can't say I know much about her character. And I'm not even about to attempt to try and list the non-series crew on DS9 who weren't introduced in the ongoing post-finale DS9 novels (so, basically, anyone beyond Ro and Prynn, plus Bashir and Sarina).
It's felt almost like the novels that are set in the Alpha Quadrant have been plot-driven over character driven. And the plot sent events forward by two or three years, while the characters were still set where they were - that was definitely the feeling I had with 'The Poisoned Chalice.' It felt like two weeks or so had passed since 'Fallen Gods' for the characters, not around two years. Frankly, I'd love it if, for at least a couple of years, the novels that come out that are set in the 24th century Alpha Quadrant were set pre-The Fall, just to make it so that we can get to know these characters (and I am STILL desperately desiring an anthology about the DS9 years between 'The Soul Key' and 'Destiny, which could incorporate at least a few of the new faces on DS9').
It's what I've come to really love about the Voyager novels, that so far, they HAVE been slower in the plot shake-ups and heavy on the characters. Things happen, and then the next book picks up on those things and focuses on them. And while I get that it has to do with the fact that the Voyager novels have only one writer while the others have been various others, I still think it's something that they could pick up on in some ways. If nothing else, I'm game for like loose duologies written by the same author in each series, to introduce plot points and let them grow and evolve for two books before reaching a resolution. Just something to allow more of a character-based focus, instead of a plot-based one.
Yah, I completely agree with the sentiment, although I think going back and filling in the gaps of anything but DS9 seems silly, since - according to what has been published in the other series - nothing really happened to the Titan & TNG characters that really changed them (although with Titan it could be major characterisation could be added to the characters not focused on in 'The Poisoned Chalice'). But damn, maybe slowing down and focusing on the characters would be good. Yet you can still have excellent character pieces focused on characters we don't really check in with very often and which are far chronologically since a prior novel - Brinkmanship, The Crimson Shadow - and these feel weighty and important and right, irrespective of how long it's been since we saw Garak or Beverly's POV.
But I do miss the slow narrative of the DS9 Relaunch in DS9 - and Kirsten really is the only person pursuing that kind of 'what happens next after the last story' narrative. Thank you very much, your writing is wonderful for this focus. these characters feel like they are growing, breathing, changing. Very lovely.
I was just going off of what I saw on Memory Beta. I might have overlooked those ones.You've forgotten to list all the VOY novels, Synthesis, Seize the Fire, Fallen Gods, Indistinguishable From Magic, and Absent Enemies. Also, The Light Fantastic, The Collectors, Disavowed, Lust's Latinum Lost (and Found), The Missing, and Armageddon's Arrow can probably be reasonably predicted in the timeline.EDIT: I was just looking through the timeline on Memory Beta, and the gaps really aren't as big as I was thinking they were.
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