I'm new to ST books, I've only read biographies thus far. In the absence of new ST episodes to watch, and since I love to read, I've been looking into Star Trek books, but so far I'm pretty confused as to where to start.
Mostly what concerns me is that there does not seem to be any particular rules as to what authors can put in their books. I could be completely wrong about that, but from leafing through some books at a bookstore it seems like a good number of authors seem to like to write stories which combine the efforts of the TOS and TNG crews. For reasons I find difficult to define, these "combos" just don't seem very plausible to me.
Therefore I must ask you, the more knowledgeable lot, are all these books considered canon? Are they all authorized by Paramount/whoever owns the ST property now? Do authors need Paramount's permission when publishing these novels?
While I always enjoy a good book, I'm not crazy about the thought of reading books in which the story does not fit into the rest of the Trek universe.
I'd also appreciate it if someone could clear something up for me. In the TNG pilot, we see Admiral McCoy, who says he's 137 years old. He looks the part, too. Now, I'm not sure where the opening sequence in Generations fits into the general ST timeline, but if these books that are written about Kirk and Picard (and their crews) working together are set after Generations intro, or at least after Encounter At Farpoint, then I'd have to say that McCoy aged terribly while the rest of the Enterprise-A crew seem quite springy for their age.
Mostly what concerns me is that there does not seem to be any particular rules as to what authors can put in their books. I could be completely wrong about that, but from leafing through some books at a bookstore it seems like a good number of authors seem to like to write stories which combine the efforts of the TOS and TNG crews. For reasons I find difficult to define, these "combos" just don't seem very plausible to me.
Therefore I must ask you, the more knowledgeable lot, are all these books considered canon? Are they all authorized by Paramount/whoever owns the ST property now? Do authors need Paramount's permission when publishing these novels?
While I always enjoy a good book, I'm not crazy about the thought of reading books in which the story does not fit into the rest of the Trek universe.
I'd also appreciate it if someone could clear something up for me. In the TNG pilot, we see Admiral McCoy, who says he's 137 years old. He looks the part, too. Now, I'm not sure where the opening sequence in Generations fits into the general ST timeline, but if these books that are written about Kirk and Picard (and their crews) working together are set after Generations intro, or at least after Encounter At Farpoint, then I'd have to say that McCoy aged terribly while the rest of the Enterprise-A crew seem quite springy for their age.