Heh, yes.One thing I thought they missed during that saga was having Spock and Chen together in a scene. That would been interesting to explore.
Heh, yes.One thing I thought they missed during that saga was having Spock and Chen together in a scene. That would been interesting to explore.
IIRC that's not on McIntee, but rather on Pocket who wanted him to use Ogawa.Indistinguishable from Magic tries to paper over how a nurse becomes a doctor in literally moments, but I didn't buy it, and she pretty much could be any doctor character, so I'm not sure why McIntee bothered.
Scotty may seem to be dead by the end, but we know from Engines of Destiny that he's still around in 2422, so he must get back somehow.
Oh, interesting, thanks. That's so weird! Not too dissimilar to some of my own experiences writing A Choice of Catastrophes.
Engines of Destiny is included in the 24th-century Scotty timeline in the back of the paperback edition of The Future Begins.Engines of Destiny was a standalone, not part of the larger continuity, and differing from other novels in its interpretations of certain things. While inter-novel continuity has been the norm since 2000, it has never been a universal requirement.
Continuity Notes:
- I spent a lot of time wondering why Leah was willing to romance La Forge, given that she's married. It turns out that her husband died in The Genesis Wave novels. But if McIntee mentioned this fact for those of us who remember "Galaxy's Child" but do not remember The Genesis Wave, I did not notice, so I was very disconcerted until I read her Memory Beta entry halfway through.
Yeah, I remember some of the discussion from when it happened, so I'll be curious to see how it plays out.IIRC, there was some talk about IFM being a little more loose, continuity-wise, compared to the rest of the novel-verse, to the point where people were surprised when a subsequent novel mentioned LaForge's stint as captain (and also, IIRC, had him quickly return to the rank of commander for some sort of T/O-related reason or something so it wouldn't get awkward if he and Worf disagreed on something).
Indistinguishable from Magic establishes that Tamala Harstad transferred off the Enterprise before the novel began, and her and La Forge didn't keep up a relationship. (Once he gets in a relationship with Leah, there's a comment that he doesn't even remember what Tamala looks like!) To be honest, I couldn't remember who she even was from Paths of Disharmony; I had to Google her.The book did mention Geordi's LTR on the Enterprise, though, in a strange and unsatisfying way. I've decided to find it funny that different authors ship different characters, so Geordi and Chen were ping-ponging between different relationships, at least until Dayton became the primary writer for TNG and stuff settled down a little with the secondary characters. Personally, I think Leah Brahms getting together with Geordi is icky for several reasons, conveniently dead husband (oh, hey, there's one) or no, so I'm glad their flings don't tend to last past single novels.
Indistinguishable from Magic establishes that Tamala Harstad transferred off the Enterprise before the novel began, and her and La Forge didn't keep up a relationship.
Indistinguishable from Magic establishes that Tamala Harstad transferred off the Enterprise before the novel began, and her and La Forge didn't keep up a relationship. (Once he gets in a relationship with Leah, there's a comment that he doesn't even remember what Tamala looks like!) To be honest, I couldn't remember who she even was from Paths of Disharmony; I had to Google her.
The fact that anyone put La Forge and Brahms together as a couple disgusts me on every possible level. *shudder*
My biggest problem with Geordi and Leah Brahms getting together in the books, is that it feels like a big step backwards for Geordi. They had to whole episode where met the real her, and got over the crush he had on the hologram, so it just felt like to much back tracking to me to suddenly have them together all these years later.
I like him and Harstad a lot better, so I was happy when they settled on that as Geordi's one stable relationship.
I agree. But I'd like to see more scenes involving Harstad. We have a picture of Brahms in our mind, but no picture of Harstad. Good scenes with important input by Harstad would make it easier for my imagination.
Same goes for Elfiki and Faur.
I could give a damn what it means for La Forge, what I don't get is why Brahms would be in any way interested in someone who, in essence, cyberstalked her, using his holographic blow-up doll to try to flirt with her, and then when she finds out about the blow-up doll and is (justifiably) pissed, he gets all self-righteous that she was so meeeeeeeeeeeean to him because he was just trying to be friendly, when what he was really trying to do was get in her pants by pretending to be compatible with her. (Like, for example, offering to make her fungili, and she says she loves fungili, and La Forge says, "Really?" as if he's surprised, when that was a calculated way to get to like her thanks to the knowledge he gained from his holographic blow-up doll.)My biggest problem with Geordi and Leah Brahms getting together in the books, is that it feels like a big step backwards for Geordi.
The fact that anyone put La Forge and Brahms together as a couple disgusts me on every possible level. *shudder*
That makes two of us!
You bring up some really good points that hadn't occurred to me there.I could give a damn what it means for La Forge, what I don't get is why Brahms would be in any way interested in someone who, in essence, cyberstalked her, using his holographic blow-up doll to try to flirt with her, and then when she finds out about the blow-up doll and is (justifiably) pissed, he gets all self-righteous that she was so meeeeeeeeeeeean to him because he was just trying to be friendly, when what he was really trying to do was get in her pants by pretending to be compatible with her. (Like, for example, offering to make her fungili, and she says she loves fungili, and La Forge says, "Really?" as if he's surprised, when that was a calculated way to get to like her thanks to the knowledge he gained from his holographic blow-up doll.)
"Galaxy's Child" did a lovely job of assassinating La Forge's character. Having Brahms get together with La Forge assassinated Brahms's right alongside it. Bleah.
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