^ This book is NOTHING like either of my books for A Time to….
You mean forcible removing a President from office without due process? That is a pretty big deal. Even if the President was corrupt, it's still not the right thing to do.I also don’t think what Picard did was that bad.
I’m talking about the earlier ones when Picard was removed as Captain for his actions in the graveyard^ This book is NOTHING like either of my books for A Time to….
Trust me, you won't mistake COLLATERAL DAMAGE for A TIME TO BE BORN/DIE.I’m talking about the earlier ones when Picard was removed as Captain for his actions in the graveyard
It isn’t his ex girlfriend again?This is a case where the question isn't, "Can Picard beat this?" but rather, "Can Picard's LAWYER beat this?"
Control 2: This Time is Personal
Sounds interesting but it sounds a bit similar to the A Time To... Series. I also don’t think what Picard did was that bad.
It isn’t his ex girlfriend again?
I get that but it just didn’t feel that much of a big deal to me. What the admiral did by getting Section 31 to kill them in cold blood seems like the bigger deal to me.
(Side-note #1: We do not actually know if Admiral Ross intended for Zife and co. to be assassinated by Section 31. We know that he conspired with them to coerce Zife into resignation, but we never learn in any of the relevant novels whether or not Ross even knew L'Haan intended to kill the trio. His internal monologue in Articles of the Federation establishes that he did, however, fear that President Bacco would herself be assassinated if she learned of Section 31 and its role in Zife's fate, and that one of his motivations for agreeing to retire per Bacco's orders was to make it less likely Section 31 would target her.)
(Side-note #2: When you think about it, the Federation of the Litverse has a pretty major problem with its democracy. It has suffered three different coups attempts in 13 years: Leyton's attempted coup against President Jaresh-Inyo in 2372; Ross's and Picard's coup against President Zife in 2379; and Baras's coup against President Bacco in 2385. There's something really wrong with Federation political culture if this crap keeps happening.)
I'm not 100% sure of that. In that scene between Ross and Bacco in AotF, it was Bacco's gallows humour joke about making Ozla Graniv 'disappear' that led Ross to give himself away by his reaction, which is how Bacco realised Zife was dead - because previously, she too had only thought he was removed into quiet retirement.
Ross wouldn't have reacted that way if he didn't at least know S31 had killed Zife, even if only after the fact.
And I'm not sure if it's in that conversation or not, but it's somewhere in that book, that the point is raised that what Picard and Ross did might not rise to the level of 'coup', because they never sought to put their own person in Zife's place. Yes, removing a popularly elected president by force would certainly qualify at least half way there, but after that, Ross and Picard stepped aside and didn't interfere any further.
Bacco was just as popularly elected as Zife was, not appointed by the dethroners of her predecessor.
I think of this as a consequence of deciding to tell stories in the political realm of the Star Trek universe. If you're going to follow those characters, you have to have dramatic stuff happen to them. Even AotF, while mostly a year-in-the-life story where the president deals with various crises without the presidency being a crisis in and of itself, still had to deal with the aftermath of one such crisis. So I think it supports my sense that The Fall was intended to put a cap on that mode of storytelling, so that the Federation government could settle down and stop being so full of crises all the time, because they didn't need to be because we weren't looking at them all the time anymore.
^ The level of debate still sparked by the events of A Time to Heal bodes well for Collateral Damage. The mission given to me by the editor was to examine those events and then construct both the prosecution and the defense arguments for Picard's case. It was a hell of a ride.
Trust me, you won't mistake COLLATERAL DAMAGE for A TIME TO BE BORN/DIE.
For starters, my B-story is completely different. ;-)
I also address Picard's legal jeopardy very differently than John Vornholt did.
That's what i don't like about what i read about the book. I love "Section 31: Control". It's in my opinion one of the most thoughtful and interesting Trek novels ever.
I'd love to read a sequel that handled all the issues raised by it without any distracting B story that takes too much space away from the main storyline.
I don't think of my Worf/Enterprise story as a distraction. It is part of the novel's theme of responsibility and repentence/forgiveness.That's what i don't like about what i read about the book. I love "Section 31: Control". It's in my opinion one of the most thoughtful and interesting Trek novels ever.
I'd love to read a sequel that handled all the issues raised by it without any distracting B story that takes too much space away from the main storyline.
The former.This makes me curious whether Collateral Damage will focus primarily on the consequences of Picard's decision to conspire with Ross and co. to coerce Zife to leave office at gunpoint, or if it will cover the broader consequences of Section 31's exposure and Control/Uraei's role in shaping United Earth and Federation society.
As much as I love this approach, can you remind me how it squares with that whole 'the books must follow TV/film' rule that rendered Hobus such an unholy mess? You might have already answered it with the next quote though:All fictional universes are alternate universes to start with. None of it is real, so all that matters is whether the story is entertaining.
So, it might all change, might not but whatever the case, the book's that are done may come out - it's just future stories that would have to fit in with the new info?There were numerous times in the TNG-through-ENT era when a book would be contradicted by an episode before its release, but the book would still come out.
As much as I love this approach, can you remind me how it squares with that whole 'the books must follow TV/film' rule that rendered Hobus such an unholy mess?
So, it might all change, might not but whatever the case, the book's that are done may come out - it's just future stories that would have to fit in with the new info?
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