The inspiration for Mirror Spock and his Memory Omega plan was inspired much more directly by the character of Hari Seldon in Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series.Hey--BTW...the more I read of Mirror Spock having a coldly logical plan to bring about the destruction of the Terran Empire...for the greater good...the more I'm somehow reminded of Atlas Shrugged, and the mysterious-yet-coldly-logical plan concieved by John Galt--a plan of total destruction of the old system.
"Who is Emperor Spock?", to coin a phrase. He's stopping the motor of the Empire....
Was that intentional, Mr. Mack, or pure coincindence?![]()
I've never read any Ayn Rand (I tried once and found her prose style abominable).
The inspiration for Mirror Spock and his Memory Omega plan was inspired much more directly by the character of Hari Seldon in Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series. I've never read any Ayn Rand (I tried once and found her prose style abominable).Hey--BTW...the more I read of Mirror Spock having a coldly logical plan to bring about the destruction of the Terran Empire...for the greater good...the more I'm somehow reminded of Atlas Shrugged, and the mysterious-yet-coldly-logical plan concieved by John Galt--a plan of total destruction of the old system.
"Who is Emperor Spock?", to coin a phrase. He's stopping the motor of the Empire....
Was that intentional, Mr. Mack, or pure coincindence?![]()
DorkBoy [TM];4018685 said:One thing I didn't like about the DS9 take on the MU is that its basically yet another variation of "look how Kirk's flaunting of the prime directive screwed things up." (Peter David likes to play this card a lot, so to speak.)
Atlas is a first draft, but not because she didn't want to revise it because it was a "hulking monster." After The Fountainhead, she felt that she didn't need editing anymore. She felt she was better than that. The point where a writer feels they've outgrown an editor is point where a writer most needs an editor.Ah...if you started with Atlas, I don't blame you. Great story, but you just know it's the first draft, and she didn't really want to revise that thick, hulking monster.![]()
Yeah, in college, when I told my American Lit professor that "Melville needed an editor," he didn't take kindly to that.(Well, hey, look at Moby Dick--great story, structural mess.)
You'd be better off looking at Hurley and Piller; Roddenberry wasn't involved with the Borg except at a distance.BTW...the society depicted in her novel Anthem is disturbingly Borg-like--right down to the use of "We" in place of "I". Hmm...I wonder if Gene had a past connection to Objectivism....
Atlas is a first draft, but not because she didn't want to revise it because it was a "hulking monster." After The Fountainhead, she felt that she didn't need editing anymore. She felt she was better than that. The point where a writer feels they've outgrown an editor is point where a writer most needs an editor.Ah...if you started with Atlas, I don't blame you. Great story, but you just know it's the first draft, and she didn't really want to revise that thick, hulking monster.![]()
Yeah, in college, when I told my American Lit professor that "Melville needed an editor," he didn't take kindly to that.(Well, hey, look at Moby Dick--great story, structural mess.)
It's fine that the middle parts of the book work symbolically, but they first have to work as a story. Which they don't.
You'd be better off looking at Hurley and Piller; Roddenberry wasn't involved with the Borg except at a distance.BTW...the society depicted in her novel Anthem is disturbingly Borg-like--right down to the use of "We" in place of "I". Hmm...I wonder if Gene had a past connection to Objectivism....
^ Save your postage. I just signed a contract to write the book and returned said contract to Jaime Costas this afternoon. Houston, we're a go!
I think it's going to be a late-2011 title, but I'm not 100-percent certain of that. A lot will depend on whether I finish the manuscript on time, etc.Congratulations, that must be quite a relaxation for you after all this editorial chaos.
Is it realistic to expect the novel in 2011 is it more likely a 2012-release?
I think it's going to be a late-2011 title, but I'm not 100-percent certain of that. A lot will depend on whether I finish the manuscript on time, etc.Congratulations, that must be quite a relaxation for you after all this editorial chaos.
Is it realistic to expect the novel in 2011 is it more likely a 2012-release?
The inspiration for Mirror Spock and his Memory Omega plan was inspired much more directly by the character of Hari Seldon in Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series. I've never read any Ayn Rand (I tried once and found her prose style abominable).Hey--BTW...the more I read of Mirror Spock having a coldly logical plan to bring about the destruction of the Terran Empire...for the greater good...the more I'm somehow reminded of Atlas Shrugged, and the mysterious-yet-coldly-logical plan concieved by John Galt--a plan of total destruction of the old system.
"Who is Emperor Spock?", to coin a phrase. He's stopping the motor of the Empire....
Was that intentional, Mr. Mack, or pure coincindence?![]()
I think it's going to be a late-2011 title, but I'm not 100-percent certain of that. A lot will depend on whether I finish the manuscript on time, etc.Congratulations, that must be quite a relaxation for you after all this editorial chaos.
Is it realistic to expect the novel in 2011 is it more likely a 2012-release?
The inspiration for Mirror Spock and his Memory Omega plan was inspired much more directly by the character of Hari Seldon in Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series. I've never read any Ayn Rand (I tried once and found her prose style abominable).Hey--BTW...the more I read of Mirror Spock having a coldly logical plan to bring about the destruction of the Terran Empire...for the greater good...the more I'm somehow reminded of Atlas Shrugged, and the mysterious-yet-coldly-logical plan concieved by John Galt--a plan of total destruction of the old system.
"Who is Emperor Spock?", to coin a phrase. He's stopping the motor of the Empire....
Was that intentional, Mr. Mack, or pure coincindence?![]()
Dave, you're a much better writer than Ayn Rand.
But that's not really saying much.
Sounds pretty cool and I have to say I'm pretty happy to read that...One small bit of news...
David spoke at FedCon this weekend, and he told us that there is going to be a kind of Donald Duck/Gladstone Gander thing in Rise Like Lions. Smiley O'Brien and his crew are going to be the unluckiest crew ever, encountering one catastrophe after another, while for Mirror Calhoun & Co. everything that can go right will do so absolutely perfectly.
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