Bruce Greenwood's casting throws the question of Pike's age into question.
No, actually, it doesn't. Why does the actor's age have any relevance to the character's age?
Bruce Greenwood's casting throws the question of Pike's age into question.
No, actually, it doesn't. Why does the actor's age have any relevance to the character's age?
But it states that her entire family is killed by him. I agree it’s rather cruel but to me, it makes Kodos more evil in my eyes; that he kills a known character.See, as horrible as an event as it is supposed to be, and sad to lose a beloved character - the part of me that loves continuity enjoyed that reference and was sad it didn't make it onscreen. And still better than Trip blowing himself up. Anyway, if you go with Hoshi having been there, she still has children, grandchildren and great greatchildren and she a long life.
1) Whether Trip survived the events of TATV or not likely has nothing to do with this novel either way, it isn't going to be addressed.Also, as this a novel, I hope it’s keeps with novel canon where Trip is still alive.
True but he’s Section 31 now. I’m sure they have ways of prolonging his life.1) Whether Trip survived the events of TATV or not likely has nothing to do with this novel either way, it isn't going to be addressed.
2) As the Discovery novels are aimed at a wider audience who isn't necessarily familiar with Trek novel continuity, the goal is to minimize the connections to it. An effort will be made not to incompatible with Lit Con, provided it doesn't get in the way of the story.
3) Just because Trip was still alive in the epilogue of Last Full Measure doesn't mean he hasn't died of natural causes between then and whenever this novel is set.
Yeah. Wow, I never realized before that both of their names came from TOS.Kang and Kodos, aren’t those the salivating aliens in The Simpson’s?
Indeed. They were named after those Dtar Trek characters.Kang and Kodos, aren’t those the salivating aliens in The Simpson’s?
Yeah. Wow, I never realized before that both of their names came from TOS.
So maybe Saru just chose his search parameters poorly?
At least it would've been nice if the list hadn't consisted entirely of familiar names. There should've been a few names on the list that we didn't recognize, names to get fans (and writers) speculating about who they were and what they were renowned for.
As for Pike, I get the impression the assignment of the Enterprise is after a very well oiled career as his "story hook" in the Cage is he's sick to death of Starfleet and ready to drop out. Presumably he's been through some serious ****.
I was under the impression it was a very short list of five people and not five or six pages of people who have names starting with letters after P. Which is to say the Discovery's AI just gave him a short list rather than a Google Search of 200 pages.
What he'd been through just before the episode was the battle on Rigel VII in which his personal yeoman and a couple of other members of his crew were killed. So he was depressed and doubting himself in the immediate wake of that tragedy. He might have had the same reaction if he were a fairly new captain and this were his first major loss. So it doesn't really prove anything about how experienced he was.
I never said five or six pages. If the first page was A-P, then logically P-Z would probably have been only one more page (or possibly two, given how common R, S, T, and W surnames are). I just think it's statistically unlikely that the most decorated captains in Starfleet are all ones we've heard of and that none of them served between the 2160s and the 2230s. Are we supposed to assume that Starfleet captains went through a 70-year slump of mediocrity? Logically, there should be other captains on the list, which leads to the possibility that maybe we only saw the first page of the list. After all, the list was only onscreen for a couple of seconds before the camera cut to Saru. Maybe it continued scrolling up off-camera.
Izar isn't on that list but as you say, timeline wise, he's already done all his accomplishments
and a literal Star Trek computer might have removed him from the list if his medals and awards were retroactively stricken from him. I'm not sure about that, though, since he's insane and not a criminal (though he could be both, I suppose).
I never said he'd done all his accomplishments, just that he was already quite accomplished before the time frame of this series. That doesn't rule out the possibility of gaining further accomplishments later on. Picard was already a legendary veteran starship commander when we met him in "Encounter at Farpoint," but that was hardly the end of his achievements.
As I keep having to point out to people, "Whom Gods Destroy" strongly suggests that Garth's accident and insanity have only recently happened, which would put them in 2268, a dozen years after Discovery. At the time of this show, Garth should still be a sane, accomplished, and highly regarded Starfleet captain.
Garth should still be a sane, accomplished, and highly regarded Starfleet captain.
While sleeping with a phaser and being in command of "the only ship keeping the Klingons at bay"
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