While she was part of the bridge crew and the chief science officer, a position that was held my a main character in every show except TNG and VGR
Wasn't Data chief science officer in addition to being operations manager?
While she was part of the bridge crew and the chief science officer, a position that was held my a main character in every show except TNG and VGR
Wasn't Data chief science officer in addition to being operations manager?
Were we ever supposed to care about Elfiki? While she was part of the bridge crew and the chief science officer, a position that was held my a main character in every show except TNG and VGR, she is not a main character but more of a TOS security chief.
Huh, I completely forgot that.Several pages were spent introducing the character, similarly how other new characters were initially featured.
Wait, who was Faur again?The Ent-E officer I'm most curious about is Faur, we've "seen" her in almost all of the post-Destiny books, but I don't think she's gotten more than a couple lines in each book.
In my mind the name sounded like a combination of Sarina Kaur and Bart Faulwell...Haha, I think you just made my point for me. She's the conn officer of the E-E leading up to and after Destiny. I thought she was brought in after Destiny, but according to Memory Beta she first appeared in Q&A.
Still want my TOS books on occasion, but no active plot line, so one a year or a series occasionally is working fine there; I know and am familiar with the crew.
And you have to eat, right?Only one TOS a book a year? I can't see that flying, commercially or otherwise.
And you have to eat, right?![]()
Feels like we need more than 12/year in order to keep any sort of momentum. Know some of these are 1-author-only, so one a year is kinda the limit, but many of the others aren't, so could be spread out more. Even if we only got up to 18/year instead of a 24/year schedule, you'd be able to touch more of them every 6 months or so, or do a special trilogy without short-changing a series' one-a-year slot, and it would feel like more of the series are moving along rather than treading water.
Elfiki did play a bigger role in Watching the Clock, and she's gotten a couple more memorable scenes in the TNG books, so she's got a fairly firm place my mind. In the first few books with her it felt like they were setting her up to be a fairly significant character, so it is a little annoying that she hasn't done much lately. She's still at least gotten more attention than Faur.In my mind the name sounded like a combination of Sarina Kaur and Bart Faulwell...
Also I had to look up Elfiki's first name and gender before my previous post about her, although it has been some time since I've last read a TNG novel.
I thought the real reason they made up the title of "ops officer" for Data instead of science officer was to explain why he was wearing gold, since Brent Spiner looked better in a gold uniform than a blue one. Also, wasn't Samantha Wildman Voyager's science officer?Effectively, but not officially. TNG was trying to avoid duplicating TOS too closely, which is why it didn't have an official science officer or communications officer, and didn't have a regular chief engineer until season 2. Partly, the assumption was that the Enterprise itself was such an intelligent vessel that it would perform most of those functions on its own. But in practice, it worked better from a story standpoint to have a dedicated chief engineer and a character to fill the function of a science officer, even if he didn't formally have that title. (Harry Kim was also an operations manager who functioned as a de facto science officer, though I attributed that to the survivors having to double up on jobs after much of the original crew was killed.)
Note to self: Read Watching the ClockElfiki did play a bigger role in Watching the Clock, and she's gotten a couple more memorable scenes in the TNG books, so she's got a fairly firm place my mind. In the first few books with her it felt like they were setting her up to be a fairly significant character, so it is a little annoying that she hasn't done much lately. She's still at least gotten more attention than Faur.
I liked her. And I find it funny that David Mack based her on an adult film actress with the same name.I've seen a few people complain about Smrhova, but I was actually pretty happy with the amount of page time Una McCormack gave her in The Crimson Shadow. I haven't read anything past that one yet though, so I don't know how significant she's been since.
If Elfiki isn't supposed to be important then why is Dygan - other than The Crimson Shadow he hasn't had much more focus than her.
Unlike Voyager and DS9 (first time round) the newer characters - Elfiki, Dygan, Chen & Smrhova haven't been particularly well integrated.
Note to self: Read Watching the Clock
I liked her. And I find it funny that David Mack based her on an adult film actress with the same name.
I really liked Choudhurry at first. She wasn't your typical female-figher, she was a spiritual peacekeeper. She was interesting!
"Funny" isn't exactly the word crossing my mind regarding Smrhova. She's just another bland security-mannequin among many. I mean... I applaud the intend to give us strong female security officers, but somehow even though this isn't a visual media, they often end up mostly just being "petit" and "slender" and... well desirable, while, at the same time they have to be your typical know-it-all expert soldier.
I really liked Choudhurry at first. She wasn't your typical female-figher, she was a spiritual peacekeeper. She was interesting! But along came David Mack, turning her into yet another slender soldier. Bennett tried to redeem this in one of his short stories, and right when I though, okay, the character is back on track... Mack happened again, killing her off. There was a lot of potential and all they could think of was "hey, let's kill her for shock value"?
The sideline-characters have "Redshirts" written all over them. Whenever a new author might get his fingers at an (seemingly established) secondary cast, he might just toss them away - and brutally so -, to introduce his own cast... which in turn might get tossed in the trash again once another author takes over. That happend quite a few times now during the relaunch novels and I'm not sure how I'm supposed to care for some Stinsons and Wheelers and Smrhovas if even their predecessors got wasted. That doesn't establish a lot of trust, does it?
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