I wasn't keen on their work
I have to agree. I only read one of their novels, I'll admit. But it was enough for me not to want to read the rest.
I wasn't keen on their work
Well, until very recently, SW had a multi-tier canon system, with the movies on top, but the books were considered canonical, to a certain extent. Now, of course, they have been declared non-canonical, but future novels will be supposedly be as canonical as the movies - so yeah, it's a bit messed up.
That "multi-tiered canon" stuff was crap. While George Lucas borrowed what he wanted to from the EU, in the end the movies were the only thing he counted, and some fans will argue he didn't even stay too consistent with them. Though, I thought Disney wasn't even going to consider future novels canon, that from now on Star Wars canon is just the movies plus Clone Wars and Rebels.
http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Canon#2014_reboot
Essentially, most things published after April 25, 2014 will be considered part of the new canon.
Is there any requirement for the books to have to align with the Countdown comic?
Except it's been made pretty clear that the main novelverse, and Spock Prime's original universe are both intended to be the same universe as every non-alternate universe story before them.My understanding is STO, including the STO tie in novel, was a separate timeline from the main Trek lit.
As was the Crucible trilogy and the Shatner novels.
Thank you for saying this. Just because Spock disappears in 2387 doesn't meant that he disappears from the universe in which the majority of Trek novels take place. The events of Star Trek may reflect occurrences in two alternate realities rather than just one. There's no reason to assume that any books written for the 50th anniversary will spend any time detailing Spock's disappearance or Romulus' destruction.
--Sran
I'd be very happy with a Spock trilogy in the vein of DRG3's Crucible series, but in line with the continuity of the novel 'verse that has been established over the last decade plus. I imagine that a 50th Anniversary of Trek Spock trilogy would probably sell quite well![]()
I'd be very happy with a Spock trilogy in the vein of DRG3's Crucible series, but in line with the continuity of the novel 'verse that has been established over the last decade plus. I imagine that a 50th Anniversary of Trek Spock trilogy would probably sell quite well![]()
This is what I meant in the other thread, that since one person is interested in reading something, they think they are somehow qualified to assert that it will be profitable for the publisher. Do these people even work for Pocket?
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