There are some fanfiction readers who insist that everything be canon-compliant.I try to stay as close to "canon" as possible, just to make the stories more realistic and accepted.
But I might do an exception for Carey.
The reason why I try to follow official "canon" as much as possible is because if I don't, my stories would be heavily criticized and dismissed by most of the Star Trek fans.There are some fanfiction readers who insist that everything be canon-compliant.
Then there are those of us who enjoy the AU stories (alternate universe, aka "what if the story happened a different way?").
As long as you mark it as AU - ideally in the story description - people can decide if they want to read it or not.
Many of my favorite fanfics are AU, ie. if Seven of Nine and Sam Wildman get married, or if Janeway chooses to have Q's baby, or (in other franchises) what if Sirius Black doesn't go to Azkaban/die or what if Hermione travels 20 years back in time and falls in love with either Remus or Sirius (there are many excellent stories either way).
If you want to write stories in which Joe Carey doesn't die, go for it. I'd read them, because I like that character and always thought he was poorly treated by the writers. And I'd bet there are plenty of Joe Carey fans who enjoy stories about him.
Your stories would only be heavily criticized and dismissed if you wrote them poorly, ie. plot that doesn't make sense, mischaracterization, poor grammar, spelling, punctuation, and lack of proper use of paragraphs when changing speakers.The reason why I try to follow official "canon" as much as possible is because if I don't, my stories would be heavily criticized and dismissed by most of the Star Trek fans.
Maybe some would dismiss it. Many wouldn't. I've read an excellent story in which Janeway opted not to engage with the Borg during the time of "Endgame" and just keep going as they were doing. The crew went to different places, met new people, added newcomers to the crew, Seven finally decided she wanted her own quarters, and so on.If I write a story about how the Voyager crew decides to stay in the Delta Quadrant and settle down on some planet where they decide to start a community and in the long run a new federation in the Delta Quadrant, then many will dismiss it. It's actually bade enough when many of my suggestions when it comes to improvement of one ill-treated Voyager character are met with comments like "but this isnt canon" or references to a certain horrible episode which never should have been made as "the real story".
All I can say at this point is that if you never try, you won't know if you'd succeed. Writing takes practice - I know this as someone who tried for 9 YEARS to succeed at NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month). That's a writing competition that's held every year in November, and the objective is to write at least 50,000 words of a story or novel in 30 days. It sounds daunting, but if you break it down, it's 1667 words per day. If you do an outline first - know where the story needs to be at certain points - the challenge and fun are in how you get there.However, I'm no slave to "canon" in every detail. In my second Kes story, I tried to follow the ongoing storyline in the Voyager Relaunch book by omitting characters like Tuvok, Seven and The Doctor from the Voyager crew. Janeway too since she was now an Admiral. However, I did find that development so crappy that in my third story they were all back on the ship. When I write another story (time is a problem for me), then they will remain there and I might bring back Carey as well.
my stories would be heavily criticized and dismissed by most of the Star Trek fans.
Pfftt... Trek fans will criticize anything. The point of fan fiction is fun not canon adherence.Your stories would only be heavily criticized and dismissed if you wrote them poorly, ie. plot that doesn't make sense, mischaracterization, poor grammar, spelling, punctuation, and lack of proper use of paragraphs when changing speakers.
Exactly. My wife writes prolifically in Lord of the Rings/The Hobbit as an AU and she loves it so do her readers. It's all in the characters and the story.These are AU stories, they diverge from canon, and the readers love them.
![]()
"Give me better scripts, damnit!"
--- --- ---
Good morning.
What did you think of Robert Beltran and his character of Chakotay? Was he given enough to chew on or should he have played a more prominent role? Was he hosed by the politics of broadcast television at the time? Did you find his attitude during interviews unreasonable or did he have a point?
This is Star Trek, and despite all of us fans trying to claim its 'more realistic' than other franchises, at the end of the day, its not... we have just as much 'space magic' as the rest of them, if not more.The reason why I try to follow official "canon" as much as possible is because if I don't, my stories would be heavily criticized and dismissed by most of the Star Trek fans.
If I write a story about how the Voyager crew decides to stay in the Delta Quadrant and settle down on some planet where they decide to start a community and in the long run a new federation in the Delta Quadrant, then many will dismiss it. It's actually bade enough when many of my suggestions when it comes to improvement of one ill-treated Voyager character are met with comments like "but this isnt canon" or references to a certain horrible episode which never should have been made as "the real story".
However, I'm no slave to "canon" in every detail. In my second Kes story, I tried to follow the ongoing storyline in the Voyager Relaunch book by omitting characters like Tuvok, Seven and The Doctor from the Voyager crew. Janeway too since she was now an Admiral. However, I did find that development so crappy that in my third story they were all back on the ship. When I write another story (time is a problem for me), then they will remain there and I might bring back Carey as well.
If you can't wow them with your wisdom baffle them with your...technobabble.Canon doesn't limit your possibilities, it just forces you to be more creative in your explanations.![]()
You want Joe Carey? His data is still stored in the transporter memory - just have a 'transporter malfunction'. A normal (lol) one, or maybe some non-corporeal entity fiddled with it so it can live as a human?
As for an alternate Voyager staying in the Delta Quadrant? There are TWO others, canonically. The 'copy' that Harry Kim is from that blew up (did it really?),
If you can't wow them with your wisdom baffle them with your...technobabble.
Strangely enough, I equate 'alternate realities' with 'fanfic'.
Anyhow, that's why I prefer bending canon, preferably using other canon, rather than just hand-waving it (which to me, another 'quantum reality' is just that
This is Star Trek, and despite all of us fans trying to claim its 'more realistic' than other franchises, at the end of the day, its not... we have just as much 'space magic' as the rest of them, if not more.
You want Joe Carey? His data is still stored in the transporter memory - just have a 'transporter malfunction'. A normal (lol) one, or maybe some non-corporeal entity fiddled with it so it can live as a human? As for an alternate Voyager staying in the Delta Quadrant? There are TWO others, canonically. The 'copy' that Harry Kim is from that blew up (did it really?), or the one that turned out to be those creatures that simply mimic'd Voyager and her crew. Take your pick. The first one may have been 'transported elsewhere/when' by the explosion, but badly damaged (leaving debris behind), and the second one... how do we know only one ship left that world? There could have been other copies, and one may have figured out how to survive. For that matter, how do we even know the one that made it back is 'the real one'?
Canon doesn't limit your possibilities, it just forces you to be more creative in your explanations.![]()
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.