I can imagine the premise: turns out the Romulans and Cardassians were right all along.
Also, that planet from TOS with all the Nazis.
George R.R. Martin: "Trek of Thrones". A book full of redshirts with everyone dying...
I'm very fond of a Scottish author called Christopher Brookmyre, who writes crime thrillers with heavy doses of black comedy, satire, politics and social commentary thrown in for good measure. I'd love to see what he could do with Scotty. Maybe a story where Scotty goes home to see him family, finds a dead body out in his mum's back garden, and comedic chaos ensues? :-)
I think he is brilliant and one of my all time favourite writers, plus I have a lot of time for him in real life too.
Have you read Bedlum or Places in the Darkness? They have a very Sci-Fi bent with his usual humour thrown in.
There may be a lot of things you can say about Heinlein, but the man was NOT a fascist by any stretch of the imagination.
I would like to see what Stephen King would do making a horror based Star Trek novel. Wouldn't necessarily be another Borg book, or even another alien book, but a threat from within the ship. Maybe revisiting the idea of "Where No Man Has Gone Before" but this time with the ESPers getting control of a ship, than going to wreck havoc not just on Starfleet, but on planetary surfaces as well.
Please. Heinlein has been dogged by the fascist label for...well as long as he wrote kinda-fascist books. Emphasize the word "not" all you want, but it's a pretty common critique. It's probably *the* most common critique.
Common as that critique may be, it's also WRONG.
How so?
Well, for one thing, the accusation that Heinlein believed that only military veterans should have the right to vote is inaccurate. Federal Service doesn't automatically mean front-line combat. Cooks, supply clerks, accountants, legal counsel, anything will do. There's plenty of room for conscientious objectors; you don't have to actually fight in a war.
And Federal Service is required to accept everyone who wishes to apply. The government is strictly forbidden from rejecting anyone, for any reason. Even the most grossly incompetent applicant must be allowed in. If the applicant doesn't qualify for an existing position, one must be invented for them.
So if everyone who wants to serve, can serve; and anyone who serves, can vote; then no one is really being disenfranchised here.
In the context of what? The fictional world that is created in Starship Troopers?
Well, for one thing, the accusation that Heinlein believed that only military veterans should have the right to vote is inaccurate. Federal Service doesn't automatically mean front-line combat. Cooks, supply clerks, accountants, legal counsel, anything will do. There's plenty of room for conscientious objectors; you don't have to actually fight in a war.
And Federal Service is required to accept everyone who wishes to apply. The government is strictly forbidden from rejecting anyone, for any reason. Even the most grossly incompetent applicant must be allowed in. If the applicant doesn't qualify for an existing position, one must be invented for them.
So if everyone who wants to serve, can serve; and anyone who serves, can vote; then no one is really being disenfranchised here.
Indeed, how could any "fascist" also write something like For Us, The Living?
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