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I read a novel in a day!

I'm not sure it's true that "destiny" implies positive. If that's the case, should the series have been called Fate instead? :)
 
Neither "destiny" nor "fate" implies anything positive or negative -- they only imply predetermination, inevitability. "Destiny" is from the same Latin root as "destination," related to the root meaning "stand" (as in to stay, to go unchanged) -- to destine something is to make it stand firmly and completely, to determine it unambiguously. "Fate" means a predetermined fortune or lot in life or the power that predetermines your fortune; the word literally means "that which is spoken," i.e. by an oracle or by the gods.

If there's a difference in the meanings of the words, it's that "fate" implies something that is dictated by higher forces, something out of your hands; whereas "destiny" can mean that, but can also perhaps convey the sense that your future is predetermined by your own nature or capabilities, for instance, someone being "destined for greatness" because of their talent, personality, or ambition, or a plan being "destined to fail" because it's ill-conceived from the start. Destiny is just where your path is taking you; fate is more specifically where you're pushed or led to by forces beyond your control.

Of course, there is "fatal," which simply means "of fate," and that's part of a tendency to use "fate" to mean specifically a bad fate, as in "seal one's fate." (which is the same sort of shorthand as using "luck" to mean good luck even though there's also a bad kind of luck). But "fatal" doesn't just mean "deadly;" it carries a connotation of inevitability -- something fatal is something that will inevitably kill you, that will fix that as your fate.


So what's predestined in Destiny? Well, there's the time loop that created the Borg. There's the Caeliar's insistence that all those events had to be allowed to stand, that they were the predetermined course of things. It could also refer to the Borg's belief that they were destined to assimilate the entire galaxy. But I suspect it applies more to Hernandez and her journey, a destiny in the less fatalistic and more individualistic sense -- surviving against all odds and ascending to a great triumph.
 
Also Erika Hernandez has a nightmare about destiny with Borg.

I just think that considering the trilogy saga was Destiny we should have been given a clearer description of the Destiny. I hate ambiguous book titles. So many times I've read a book and not understood the title. Even though I thoroughly enjoyed this as one of the best reads in a long time it takes something away from it when the title didn't connect.

By the way I read your Orion's hounds novel last year. I really enjoyed it. And loved the return of the space jellies. It was the only Titan book I've read but I was able to get to know the crew. I didn't feel as connected with the characters in Destiny -probably because there were just so many across the fleet.
 
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