Huh? "Disproven?" Where in the world did you get that idea?
From the
Star Trek Chronologies. Going off of memory the first edition placed a second five-year mission between the first two movies (with the note that it wasn't a canonical event, but this's were it would've happened, it was "real"). The second edition dropped that entry entirely, replacing it with stuff about Kirk's career, so I assumed that the possibility of a second mission was scrapped. If I'm wrong about that, okay.
On the contrary, there have been a number of post-TMP novels -- not a large percentage of the hundreds that are out there, but a fair number. And the post-TMP 5-year mission is actually part of the current novel continuity, because that continuity includes The Captain's Daughter, the first John Harriman/Demora Sulu novel and the foundation for their characterizations in later works. That book posits a 5YM from 2273-78, with Sulu planning to transfer to the Bozeman just afterward but having to stay on Earth to take care of Demora, coincidentally saving him from being lost with that ship.
To play Devil's advocate, not all the older novels in the current "novel canon" fit 100%. For example, Peter David tied his old TNG novel,
Vendetta, into the current novel series with
Before Dishonor, ignoring that many of the details in the former conflict with canon and later books. So, I could see an older book that used the second mission being in "novel canon," even if we had to ignore some of the specific parts, like the mission.
Along the same lines, in some of your own writings, you've included references to one of my favorite TOS numbered novels,
First Frontier (the one where the crew go back in time to the dinosaurs, thanks to the Clan Ru space raptors). However, the depiction of Vulcan in the human-less timeline of
First Frontier is essentially the TOS version of them and ENT argues that without humans, Vulcan culture would've stayed the more aggressive types that V'Las wanted his world to be. (In fact, I think your depiction of a human-less
Star Trek galaxy in the second DTI novel is closer to what you'd really get.) However, we gloss over
First Fontier's problems and assume that the overall story is correct, even if we ignore some parts.
I've also referenced that second 5YM in my post-TMP works. In The Darkness Drops Again, I established that after 2278, Kirk was promoted back to the admiralty but got to keep the Enterprise as his personal flagship with Spock in command, occasionally taking it out on special missions. (I felt that the events of TWOK could be seen as an example of one such mission.)
Interesting retcon. Out of curiosity, is there a specific reason that it's desired to have a second TOS mission in the novel continuity?
Along the same lines, as a
Star Trek novelist, how do you pick which elements from older books that don't quite mesh to fudge into the current continuity and which ones should be left alone. I mean, I haven't seen any attempts to try and reconcile
Final Frontier or
Strangers From the Sky in the current novel continuity. They're just left as older books that stand alone.
Except there's 12 years between TMP and TWOK, per the novel continuity. That's a huge amount of room to tell stories that are a lot more than "connective tissue."
Sure. That's just been my general impression of the stuff in that era I've read (and other eras have their connective tissue, too). Of course, I do have my biases. But, it seems like a lot of movie era books are sequels to TV shows and stuff.
There are also at least 6 years between TFF and TUC. (The Chronology puts TFF in 2287, presumably since Nimbus III is said to be 20 years old and had to be founded after contact with the Romulans was renewed in 2266. But that makes no sense given the intervals between movies; I can't see it happening any later than early 2286.)
Why 2286?
That's pretty much what I wanted to do in the series that
Ex Machina was the "pilot" for. I've managed to sneak bits of it into
Darkness Drops and
DTI: Forgotten History.[/QUOTE]