A few days ago Trekmovie.com announced 4 new post-STXI novels a few days ago as part of Pocket’s 2010 line-up.
The books are all stand-alone adventures, and authors can do pretty much what they want (yeah, right) as long as everything goes right back the way it started by the last page. So just like the old TOS/TNG/DS9/VOY books, then.
I’m looking forward to these books, and there were a few things I’d love to see in them (not story ideas), and some other thoughts:
Historian’s Note
I eagerly await the Doc Brown Back to the Future II diagram explaining to the masses that this story takes place in an alternate timeline to classic Trek. I don’t want a 5-minutes-in-photoshop, poorly-printed, cut off by the Xerox diagram here, people. It has to be a work of black-and-white art (and better than the Star Trek Online one!)
Continuity
The novels are said to be “stand alone”, but I’d love to see them put in some sort of order with a single line each, the same way Spock, Messiah! made it clear it came right after Spock Must Die! by a single line McCoy said. So insignificant would these lines be they could be added by the editor prior to release without too much fuss.
Content
The new Star Trek was an action movie. Stuff exploded loudly (brain-damagingly loudly in the cinema I was in), people ran around lots, got into fights, Kirk dangled over the edge of things every 20 minutes or so. Great fun.
But should the novels follow this template? One of the great things about (all of) Star Trek is that any kind of story can be squeezed into it’s universe – but won’t fans of this movie expect more of the sort of stuff they saw in the movie?
What I don’t want to see
Generic TOS novels with different faces on the cover and slightly different backstories for the crew.
Blatant rehashes of scenes from the film the way Kobayashi Maru did for Enterprise (another Orion slave market rumble, another 9/11 in space etc)
Pages wasted explaining away minor technical errors in the film that only Bernd Schenider cares about.
A 366 meter Enterprise. It wouldn’t fit the shuttles or brewery.
Anyone else?
The books are all stand-alone adventures, and authors can do pretty much what they want (yeah, right) as long as everything goes right back the way it started by the last page. So just like the old TOS/TNG/DS9/VOY books, then.
I’m looking forward to these books, and there were a few things I’d love to see in them (not story ideas), and some other thoughts:
Historian’s Note
I eagerly await the Doc Brown Back to the Future II diagram explaining to the masses that this story takes place in an alternate timeline to classic Trek. I don’t want a 5-minutes-in-photoshop, poorly-printed, cut off by the Xerox diagram here, people. It has to be a work of black-and-white art (and better than the Star Trek Online one!)
Continuity
The novels are said to be “stand alone”, but I’d love to see them put in some sort of order with a single line each, the same way Spock, Messiah! made it clear it came right after Spock Must Die! by a single line McCoy said. So insignificant would these lines be they could be added by the editor prior to release without too much fuss.
Content
The new Star Trek was an action movie. Stuff exploded loudly (brain-damagingly loudly in the cinema I was in), people ran around lots, got into fights, Kirk dangled over the edge of things every 20 minutes or so. Great fun.
But should the novels follow this template? One of the great things about (all of) Star Trek is that any kind of story can be squeezed into it’s universe – but won’t fans of this movie expect more of the sort of stuff they saw in the movie?
What I don’t want to see
Generic TOS novels with different faces on the cover and slightly different backstories for the crew.
Blatant rehashes of scenes from the film the way Kobayashi Maru did for Enterprise (another Orion slave market rumble, another 9/11 in space etc)
Pages wasted explaining away minor technical errors in the film that only Bernd Schenider cares about.
A 366 meter Enterprise. It wouldn’t fit the shuttles or brewery.
Anyone else?