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Forgotten History/DTI Questions

Mr Silver

Commodore
Newbie
I've only just noticed that Christopher L. Bennett's upcoming novel is indeed a sequel to the excellent Watching the Clock! Does this mean that Pocket have given the go ahead for a new series of novels? I thought that WTC was supposed to be a one off?

Also, I'm curious if this will be a series by the same author, or will it be one that features many different authors a'la Titan?
 
^I could be mistaken, but I seem to remember Christopher mentioning that they would appear in the framing sequence.
 
I've only just noticed that Christopher L. Bennett's upcoming novel is indeed a sequel to the excellent Watching the Clock! Does this mean that Pocket have given the go ahead for a new series of novels?

No, it just means my editor suggested doing a TOS/DTI book as my next project. Which came as a complete surprise to me. If there are any further ones beyond this, it'll be on a case-by-case basis.

Here's what I announced about the book back in July:
Star Trek: Forgotten History (or Star Trek: DTI: Forgotten History, as it’s still being billed on the Simon & Schuster sites) is the “origin story” of the Department of Temporal Investigations, a group whose founding date was established in earlier works as 2270. Naturally, the time-travel exploits of Kirk and the Enterprise are heavily involved in those foundational events. The main body of the novel begins in 2267, exploring the Starfleet/Federation response to Kirk’s time-travel discoveries, but the bulk of it takes place in the era following Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Yes, I’m finally getting to revisit the post-TMP timeframe I’ve previously explored in Ex Machina and Mere Anarchy: The Darkness Drops Again, and I’m very pleased about it. Additionally, the novel has a frame story featuring the 24th-century DTI characters from Watching the Clock — and several of the DTI’s older members, the characters established as having been alive at the time, will play at least small roles in the main body of the story as well.

So to some extent, Forgotten History is both a prequel and a sequel to Watching the Clock, and both a prequel and a sequel to Ex Machina. Yet I’m taking care to write it as a self-contained tale, something you can follow without having read either prior work.

Although as it turned out, only about half the book takes place post-TMP, not "the bulk of it."
 
Forgotten History is a prequel.

Yeah, I've just read the synopsis right now!

It will still feature Luclsy and Dulmar in some role surely?
I'm not Christopher, but since it's TOS I'm assuming it won't . The description being used on all of the sites right now is one from the Watching The Clock. Pocket has apparently started using the description of the previous novel in a series as the placeholder instead of writting a new one, because they're doing the same thing for The Eternal Tide.
 
Assuming you are referring to the STO novel (Needs of the Many, I think?), I'm not super-familiar with it, but I know that Watching the Clock is not in the same reality as it. So however Jake may have spelt it there is irrelevant to the question about CLB's Dulmur.
 
A number of tie-in works have spelled it "Dulmer" based on the assumption that it's derived from "Mulder." But it's spelled Dulmur in the script and the novelization of "Trials and Tribble-ations," on Memory Alpha, and on Startrek.com.
 
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