Actually, the Xindi arc had nothing to do with the TCW. The Sphere Builders were not a faction in said war which is why Future Guy shopped them to Archer and co. He didn't want Earth destroyed and the SB were losing in the future, so they caused the Xindi to try and destroy Earth. The Xindi arc was only linked into the TCW at the beginning and end.I've gotta say, I really hate time-travel; particularly the Temporal Cold War. I liked Enterprise, minus that (so there's seasons 1, 2, & 3)
So I tend to steer clear of that aspect of Trek canon.
I'm sure this happens a lot in writing, but I was curious... are there episodes or perhaps whole series/movies that you ignore when writing?
-- ZC
The Xindi arc was only linked into the TCW at the beginning and end.
I count on screen as canon. Books and comics, I'm much more willing to keep or discard as I wish (There's no way I will ever accept the X-Men/Star Trek crossover as canon!). Obviously I don't use New Frontiers as canon; although there are elements of the DS9 relaunches I like and I believe that we have incorporated into United Trek in one way or another; and there are other bits and pieces I like to cherry pick such as elements in the Vanguard series--but I don't really regard the novels as canon.
Liked the Romulan stuff by her but have you read Dreadnought? (retches quietly) It took her a while to get her act together. I ignore her take on the highly corruptable Starfleet leadership-it's like striking a cracked bell.
Liked the Romulan stuff by her but have you read Dreadnought? (retches quietly) It took her a while to get her act together. I ignore her take on the highly corruptable Starfleet leadership-it's like striking a cracked bell.
Actually, you're thinking of Diane Carey. I've never read Dreadnought or its sequel Battlestations (or was Battlestations the first book and Dreadnought the second? I can't remember). The first-person voice is too off-putting, especially since the person in question is a Mary Sue character. A lot of Carey's stuff contains the most incessant Kirk-worshiping you'll see outside the Shatnerverse.
Diane Duane, on the other hand, is an excellent writer who manages to inject quite a bit of "hard sci-fi" into her work. In addition to the Rihannsu books, she also wrote Spock's World, which is the definitive work on Vulcans.
Sorry to go off-topic there. *sheepish grin*
I like Diane Carey's work as she tends to come up with some original, open-ended make believe. She doesn't box her characters in, the way that Pulaski was, with "A Time For Peace" & the e-book "Progress", leaving her at the Phlox Institute.
Her latest work, Ship of the Line, about the maiden voyage of the Big E was ATROCIOUS at best, I managed 35 pages before putting it down again. Her work is too "Kirk is God, Kirk is Dreamy" and SotL had the dumbest premise this side of the neutral zone, Picard being taught how to be a captain by a Kirk hologram??????? Please spare me. Plus, she puts too much of her sailing stuff into her books./\ Sorry Jason- I respectfully agree to disagree-but only because I've read Dreadnought and Battlestations. Maybe her later stuff got better-but she lost me there.![]()
So this is really a discussion over Personal continuity, right? What we accept/see and what not?
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