Are there any good Saavik novels anyone might recommend?
I like Spock-centric novels too.
- Ib
I like Spock-centric novels too.
- Ib
Are there any good Saavik novels anyone might recommend?
I second Defcon's recommendation (assuming it was one) of The Pandora Principle by Carolyn Clowes -- an underappreciated gem, that one....
Has any of the backstory been used anywhere else?
I don't suppose any stories even attempt to explain... why her eyebrows changed
The ST IV script has Kirk saying he understands her decision to remain behind "in your condition". ie. inferring that Saavik was pregnant. (Of course she may have been intimate with David Marcus - see the novelizations of ST II and III - or when she helped young Spock go through pon farr in movie III.or why she remained on Vulcan in "Star Trek IV"?
I don't suppose any stories even attempt to explain Saavik's stronger emotional control in "Star Trek III" or why her eyebrows changed
or why she remained on Vulcan in "Star Trek IV"?
It seems most writers handling Saavik choose to ignore the fully Vulcan version of Saavik in the third film
The eyebrows in II were a mistake; they never should have been there, genetically they are impossible, so it's actually a correction.
Margaret Wander-Bonnano's new book, currently titled "Unspoken Truth", deals with Saavik during that time of ST IV and after, so we'll see what she does with that time!
There is no "fully Vulcan version of Saavik" in ST III. Roddenberry, (and Paramount) approved of the half-Romulan background, including a general backstory that she was on an abandoned colony and Spock was one of those who rescued her, then later sponsered her for the Academy. Because it's now the approved background, novels have to include it for Saavik books.
Ironically, it was Nicholas Meyers, not Nimoy, who said in an interview shortly before the movie was put on TV that Saavik was fully Vulcan, and someone "stupid" came up with those lines saying she was half-Romulan. He said he considered an insult to say his direction of Saavik or Kirstie Alley's portrayal was anything but fully Vulcan, that there was nothing not Vulcan about her. So he removed the scene where they say she's half-Romulan. He was vehemently against any deleted scenes being put back or any future reference to her being half-Romulan ever made. This conflicts with his latest interviews where he now takes credit for the whole script (ignoring the timetable that "The Making of ST II" documents), so that means the "stupid" person who wrote those half-Romulan lines would be him. LOL!![]()
No way is that the real cover, since it's too Photoshopped and the shape is wrong... some kind of fan mockup?
The eyebrows in II were a mistake; they never should have been there, genetically they are impossible, so it's actually a correction.
Inspired by Alley's Saavik perhaps? Certainly, they had little angle in Season One.This makeup change would be used throughout the rest of Trek (T'Pol barely has any angle at all).
I have no recall of that. The early pages of the final shooting script have numerous mentions of Saavik's mixed heritage in the stage directions, even versions without the "half-Romulan" reference in the dialogue.it was Nicholas Meyers, not Nimoy, who said in an interview shortly before the movie was put on TV that Saavik was fully Vulcan, and someone "stupid" came up with those lines
There is always the Vulcan's Forge/Heart/Soul series. Primarily Spock-centric, with a lot of development of Saavik and the relationship between them.
There is a Saavik-centric novel coming out sometime next year by Margaret Wander-Bonnano aka Garamet here on the board.
Well, to be fair, it is rather illogical to say "She's half-Romulan, therefore she has less emotional control," which I believe was the gist of the deleted scenes. That's as illogical as blaming Spock's emotionality on his human half. What's being overlooked in both cases is that the reason Vulcans embrace logic is because their innate emotions are exceedingly intense, so much so that they have to learn rigorous control in order to survive as a civilization. Also, Romulans and Vulcans are just different "breeds" within the same species, so there shouldn't be any fundamental genetic difference in their psychology. Vulcan emotional control is cultural, not biological. If Saavik is more emotional than a typical Vulcan, it's because of her upbringing, not her genes. It really shouldn't have anything to do with whether she's half-Romulan or not.
Anomalous, perhaps, but it's an exaggeration to call them genetically impossible.
No way is that the real cover... some kind of fan mockup?
Uhh, no. The novels don't "have to" include anything that isn't actually onscreen. Whether Roddenberry approved it or not is irrelevant, because he died 17 years ago and his policies are no longer binding
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