But also, election years are never fun.
Speak for yourself.![]()
Sadly we have real world versions of the silly party but not the sensible party.
But also, election years are never fun.
Speak for yourself.![]()
I can't see it working as anything other than a Myriad Universes adventure, due to the ever-changing futures we've seen in Trek over the years. IIRC, in "Watching the Clock", there was doubt as to whether the 29th century and 31st century time cops represented different points along the same future, or two divergent ones.Me too.I'll join the chorus and state that Forgotten History is among the Trek books I'm most anticipating this year. I am also very excited about the time frame selected for this novel as well. Christopher has stated he'd like to maybe move on to something else after this one but I still uphold my suggestion from the Watching the Clock thread that I would seriously LOVE LOVE LOVE an Uptime book starring Jenna Noi. As much as I liked Garica and the other characters, and obviously our two stars, I fell in love with Jenna Noi as a character. One of the best characters I think Chris has handled as a writer. So fascinating and I loved her banter with the DTI gang. So yeah I know I'll be holding out for the possibility of an Uptime book still![]()
Oh yeah, I'll second this one.
It would be neat and quite difficult I'd imagine to do a Trek book from the Uptime perspective. but I'd love it.
^Well, rfmcdpei already said he's read it, so I'd say not quite two pages.
First reaction? Silly as it sounds, I should watch TAS.
When will the annotations be up?
My reaction was the former. I've read quite a bit of Trek literature, and I've watched all five of the different live series, all four save Enterprise in their entirety. I haven't watched TAS before, though. I don't know why I haven't done it before.I should. One reason is because elements of TAS (excluding "Yesteryear") have made it into Trek TV canon, never mind Trek literature. Without providing spoilers, I can say that Forgotten History is the recent Trek novel that has the greatest amount of content derived from TAS. Watching TAS would provide some more background.I'm not sure whether you're saying you think your reaction would sound silly to us or that TAS sounds silly to you. If it's the latter, I'd say that TAS's silly ratio isn't substantially worse than that of TOS itself.
My reaction was the former. I've read quite a bit of Trek literature, and I've watched all five of the different live series, all four save Enterprise in their entirety. I haven't watched TAS before, though. I don't know why I haven't done it before.I should.
One reason is because elements of TAS (excluding "Yesteryear") have made it into Trek TV canon, never mind Trek literature.
Without providing spoilers, I can say that Forgotten History is the recent Trek novel that has the greatest amount of content derived from TAS.
I've never watched TAS ...
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