Out of interest, when this was planned as a TOS novel, were the Lucsly/Dulmur bits in there, or was the 2383 stuff added in when it was changed to a DTI book. The framing parts didn't particularly stand out as not belonging, but in many ways, the novel could have worked as a straightforward TOS story that happened to be about the founding of the DTI.
Out of interest, when this was planned as a TOS novel, were the Lucsly/Dulmur bits in there, or was the 2383 stuff added in when it was changed to a DTI book. The framing parts didn't particularly stand out as not belonging, but in many ways, the novel could have worked as a straightforward TOS story that happened to be about the founding of the DTI.
It was never "changed" to a DTI book. It was conceived from the start as a TOS/DTI crossover, and the first idea I had was the one the final novel is built around -- Lucsly and Dulmur investigating a mystery that reveals the truth about the Enterprise's role in the DTI's origins, providing a frame for TOS-era flashbacks. I was led to expect that it would be labeled and marketed as TOS, so I structured it with the primary emphasis on the TOS-era characters. By the time I got confirmation that it was going to have the DTI logo on the cover, I'd already written it. There were no changes beyond the usual copyedits and textual tweaks.
I'm sure it does, but if you add up all of Voyager's temporal incidents, it only comes out to a dozen, three of which ("Time and Again," "Year of Hell," and "Shattered") were erased or negated and thus never became known to the DTI. So her record does not match Kirk's established record of 17 distinct violations. (Although it's unclear whether those are all separate incidents; it could be that a single incident could encompass multiple violations.)
I wouldn't agree that the future DTI characters weren't needed, since the situation couldn't have been resolved without Lucsly's contribution -- and, in a sense, his sacrifice (of his long-held convictions and assumptions). That was the moment the whole story was designed to build to: Lucsly coming face-to-face with his personal bete noire James Kirk and being forced to reassess his articles of faith.
Perhaps she committed some which didn't happen in the show. Some of Kirk's 17 incidents weren't from TOS.
I'm curious, Christopher, did you ever tally up how many distinct violations each captain committed in the course of their shows? That would make for an interesting comparison.
I wouldn't agree that the future DTI characters weren't needed, since the situation couldn't have been resolved without Lucsly's contribution -- and, in a sense, his sacrifice (of his long-held convictions and assumptions). That was the moment the whole story was designed to build to: Lucsly coming face-to-face with his personal bete noire James Kirk and being forced to reassess his articles of faith.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.