Steve Roby said:
First two cents from someone who's bought all the IDW Trek comics so far and will be buying the collections as well: You can look at continuity with the books as a problem. Or you can look at it as an opportunity.
Actually, I see it as both. It's just that sometimes they're working against each other, and for some questions the answer is on one side of the divide and for some questions it's on the other.
Example: I just recently finished a Trek/Borg script for IDW's Aliens Spotlight series. I wrapped it up about a week before Resistance came out, and it's already with the artist. So, is Resistance a problem or an opportunity? Obviously, if there's anything glaringly contradictory, it's a problem (and, if there are overwhelming similarities, even more of a problem!). But it's also not reasonable to expect a book publisher to start sending out its manuscripts to every other licensee who might be doing something about the same subject, especially when considering how many different Star Trek books come out each year.
With enough advance time, you could possibly request an advance copy (like, say, what they send to reviewers), but since I'm new at the company and there was a tight deadline on the comics script, it just wasn't logistically possible. (And, come to think of it, as a writer on the same subject, I'm not sure I'd want to see their MS ahead of time.) So, on this one, it falls squarely inside the problem box.
But, at the same time, a writer like Keith, who's done a lot of ST novels, could easily bring some of those ideas over into an IDW comic -- not necessarily an adaptation or spinoff book... but if there were clever references, consistencies and obvious continuities for the people who had also read the novels, it would make the story that much better for them.
So, there's my thoughts. Feel free to disagree -- I'm always open to other ideas.
Cheers,
Andrew Steven Harris
Editor
IDW Publishing