I enjoyed it thoroughly. The most satisfying thing for me was how it reconciled the technology discrepancies: the thing about how all Treks after TOS seemed to be more technologically advanced. They sold it about the only way they could, by having characters rave about how more advanced the TOS ship was and the plot device that the Defiant was the only way to win a 22nd century war.
What was it gonna be about?I really liked the episodes. Wish we had gotten to see the planned follow-up for Season 5...
The first MU story in Glass Empires is by Sussman, Ward, and Dilmore, and it tells what would have appeared in Season 5 if it had happened. It's called Age of the Empress and features MU Hoshi, Shran, T'Pol, and a whole host of other characters both familiar and new.
What was it gonna be about?
The first MU story in Glass Empires is by Sussman, Ward, and Dilmore, and it tells what would have appeared in Season 5 if it had happened. It's called Age of the Empress and features MU Hoshi, Shran, T'Pol, and a whole host of other characters both familiar and new.
The second story in Glass Empires, called The Sorrows of Empire, by David Mack, was also excellent -- nay, brilliant. It was an amazing deconstruction of the nature of tyranny and of the need for constitutional democratic liberalism as it followed Spock through his decades-long plan to destroy the Terran Empire from within.
The first MU story in Glass Empires is by Sussman, Ward, and Dilmore, and it tells what would have appeared in Season 5 if it had happened. It's called Age of the Empress and features MU Hoshi, Shran, T'Pol, and a whole host of other characters both familiar and new.
The second story in Glass Empires, called The Sorrows of Empire, by David Mack, was also excellent -- nay, brilliant. It was an amazing deconstruction of the nature of tyranny and of the need for constitutional democratic liberalism as it followed Spock through his decades-long plan to destroy the Terran Empire from within.
Now that sounds cool. Is this available somewhere to read?
^^okay thank you. Sorry I'm not 100% up on stuff.![]()
Absolutely agree. Sorrows is shockingly brilliant. I recommend to any Sci-Fi fan, but for Trek fans, it should be mandatory.The second story in Glass Empires, called The Sorrows of Empire, by David Mack, was also excellent -- nay, brilliant. It was an amazing deconstruction of the nature of tyranny and of the need for constitutional democratic liberalism as it followed Spock through his decades-long plan to destroy the Terran Empire from within.
Now that sounds cool. Is this available somewhere to read?
As we said in our posts, both stories are in the book called Star Trek: Mirror Universe: Glass Empires. There is also a TNG story in that volume called The Worst of Both Worlds by Greg Cox. I agree that The Sorrows of Empire is absolutely brilliant. It is one of my few 10/10 reading experiences of this decade.
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