Re: Catering to the Janeway Fans?
At the end of Jericho first season, one of my favorite characters was killed. I missed him throughout the second season, he left a palpable hole in the show. That hole was part of what second season was about. It was a part of the story.
And in my own life, I still miss a friend of mine that died three weeks after we both arrived on campus Freshman year of college. He was an amazing guy, the center of every group of people he ever found, funny and enlightening. I knew him for three weeks, 6 years ago. And I still miss him.
Are stories like that not worth telling?
I mean, if you don't want to read them, more power to you; I'm not telling you to buy a book you don't want to read. But important people DO die. Why should that story be off limits?
I would say that what's interesting about her death is that future Trek books will miss her presence. Your logic does not hold.Thank you Gorf, I'd like to add one thought. If Janeway is so expendable that future Trek books will not miss her presence, then all arguments centering on how the "impact" of her death progesses the story line will be negated.
If she isn't important then you have no need to kill her off, and if she is important then you need to keep her anyway.
Brit
At the end of Jericho first season, one of my favorite characters was killed. I missed him throughout the second season, he left a palpable hole in the show. That hole was part of what second season was about. It was a part of the story.
And in my own life, I still miss a friend of mine that died three weeks after we both arrived on campus Freshman year of college. He was an amazing guy, the center of every group of people he ever found, funny and enlightening. I knew him for three weeks, 6 years ago. And I still miss him.
Are stories like that not worth telling?
I mean, if you don't want to read them, more power to you; I'm not telling you to buy a book you don't want to read. But important people DO die. Why should that story be off limits?