Shouldn't it be a "Biography", not an autobiography? Picard himself didn't write it.
It's written as though he did. This is hardly the first time a fictional character is credited as being the author of a real book, Star Trek has even done it before with the STO tie-in novel listing Jake Sisko as its author. This is not a new concept.Shouldn't it be a "Biography", not an autobiography? Picard himself didn't write it.
Are you saying Jake Sisko didn't write it?It's written as though he did. This is hardly the first time a fictional character is credited as being the author of a real book, Star Trek has even done it before with the STO tie-in novel listing Jake Sisko as its author. This is not a new concept.
I also quite liked how the Captain's Table novels credited the author's as "as recorded by" and not "written by".
Yeah, I remember the Pike entry being third-person bar parts and first-person story parts. Crazy theory time: Maybe the author recorded Pike's story and Pike recorded the events in the bar, kind of like a "making of".Though each author also had their own take on how first-persony each book was. In some it was cover-to-cover, in others it was just the story being told, and the framing sequences were in regular ol' third person.
Books being credited to fictional characters has been happening quite a bit these days. Along with this one, there's the Kirk autobiography, the Nikki Heat books, which are credited to Richard Castle, the fiction lead character of the TV series Castle, God Hates Us All, which is credited to the fictional lead of Californication, Hank Moody. There was also a Lost book credited to a character who died in the plane crash, How to Archer, which is credited to Sterling Archer from Archer, and later this year they are going to be releasing a new in universe Planet of the Apes book which is credited to the Orangutan, Maurice, and The World According to Rick, which is credited to Rick Sanchez from Rick and Morty..It's written as though he did. This is hardly the first time a fictional character is credited as being the author of a real book, Star Trek has even done it before with the STO tie-in novel listing Jake Sisko as its author. This is not a new concept.
Books being credited to fictional characters has been happening quite a bit these days.
One nit on the Picard book - there is an errant footnote that shows up early on that seems to have transported itself from the Kirk autobio somehow.
THAT is the Picard biog I want to read. With Chapter 13: I was really Wesley's dad.Chapter 8: 'My night with Vash' was my favorite bit.
I've just finished this and was not a fan. It was the most basic connecting the dots on Picard's past, with very little new insight. The only time we really get the kind of "dirt" I'd love from these "autobiographies" is the revelation that Picard didn't like Pulaski and was already planning to oust her when she requested a transfer. The post-Enterprise stuff was of mild interest, and turned out to be a fusion of "All Good Things" and the Countdown comic miniseries.
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