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Should novels set in the JJVerse rectify the film's plot holes?

I didn't mean actually writing them at this moment. I meant formulating ideas to pitch. Sort of a "once bitten, twice shy" sort of thing. I should have been clearer. I can't imagine how frustrating it must be to actually have it written and scheduled and the pulled at the last minute. And not once, but four times.


Understood. But, like Christopher said, it's not like we were going to being doing that anyway, unless it looked like it might lead to a job down the road. I don't spend a lot of time dreaming up STAR WARS or BATTLESTAR GALACTICA plots either, but I would if approached. You go where the work is.

I really enjoyed writing my nuTrek novel. If and when I have a chance to so again, I'll jump at the opportunity.

In the meantime, I have a CSI book to revise . . . .

Incidentally, I not trying to jump all over you on this. It's just that, whenever I do book signings and conventions and such, I'm always surprised at how many people think that we write the tie-in books first, then try to sell them. It's a very common, and dangerous, misconception which I like to clear up every chance I get!
 
Well, we're talking about the character of James T. Kirk here. What I mean is that that character has been featured in many different stories and been interpreted in many different ways by writers, directors, and actors (since even Shatner had more than one interpretation of Kirk over the years) as well as by audiences. This is an interpretation of Kirk by a team of actor, writers, and director who haven't interpreted the character before, so naturally they bring something new in their approach to that character. What they see in the character isn't going to be the same thing other people see, so not every fan is going to agree with their way of interpreting the character. There have been stories that have interpreted Kirk in ways I don't agree with. But Kirk is not a character defined by a single story. All the different interpretations are just different facets of the whole.

Yeah, I agree with all that. But I don't see how that's intrinsically the mark of a good character.

And been fired by the bosses and/or stockholders who demand that they do everything they can to make more profit. After all, they're in competition with other businesses, and if they underperform, they get outcompeted and suffer for it. That's how business works.

I like how you didn't quote the part where I said that wasn't the point. I'm not stupid, I understand that's just the way the business works. Again, as I said later in that same paragraph, I'm actually agreeing with you here:
In fact, the point I was trying to make was essentially the same as yours, that it's just the nature of the movie business.

That doesn't make any sense. It was the consistent success of the first four ST movies that led to Paramount bringing ST back to television with TNG. And there are tons of other examples of studios developing TV spinoffs and tie-ins to try to build on the success of movie franchises.

I don't see any spinoffs for Batman, Spider-Man, or any of the other big explosive action movies that most closely resemble the format that this Star Trek movie had (unless you count cartoons). Sure, 2-4 were big action movies, but they were moderately successful B-movies, and besides, the glory days of TV Trek were still fresh in some people's minds (especially since it was cleaning up in syndication for many years after cancellation). The freshest TV Trek memory now is Enterprise (now, I personally liked Enterprise, but like it or not, it wasn't successful).
I'm not stating this as any kind of insider knowledge, but my pessimistic read of the situation is that the suits may be saying, "See, Trek on TV isn't working anymore, we just need to stick with the movies for a while, and not ruin the good thing we got." I would be the first person to be thrilled if I'm wrong about that, but until we see a show on the air, I won't be holding my breath.

Besides, you're forgetting who the "suits" in charge of the franchise are these days. When CBS and Paramount split, the former got the TV properties and the latter got the movie properties. And ST is intrinsically, primarily a TV property, so CBS got ownership of the whole franchise. Because it's also a movie property, Paramount got to keep a license to make more ST movies (similarly to how CBS licenses Pocket to make ST novels, IDW to make ST comics, and so on). But it's still CBS, the television side of the corporate split, that owns Star Trek and decides its future. Paramount retains the motion picture rights as long as it keeps making movies, but it can't stop CBS from deciding to make a TV series. And I can't see why CBS wouldn't want to make a new series to increase their profits from the franchise's new life. It doesn't make sense that they'd leave it exclusively in the hands of a licensee. As I said the other day (though maybe not in this thread, I forget), I think I've read that they're holding off on a new TV series until after the next movie or two, just to give the movie series more traction, but I don't see them holding off perpetually.

This, at least, is good news. Hopefully, it'll be more like the next movie and not two.

Within the context of the fictional "reality," of course you can. If someone says that Spock had four arms, that can be conclusively debunked with a single screencap. If someone says that Starfleet's first major battle with the Borg was at Wolf 358, that can be debunked by pointing out all the references to Wolf 359. And if someone says that the arrowhead insignia was exclusively or originally the Enterprise's insignia until after TOS, that can be conclusively disproven by reference to "Court-martial," "Friendship One," and now ST XI.

You're absolutely right about that. I realized after I had posted that what I had meant to say was "you can't debunk something that isn't being purported as fact (even within that fictional reality)." I didn't think that a parenthetical clause of a completely unrelated point would be ripped apart for factual accuracy. It was, again, just an anecdote, the point of which was to illustrate how easily such quirks as the trial result in TVH could be explained. I didn't think I'd have to run it by Richard Arnold first.

And I don't deny that that probably was the intent of the producers at the time.

Thank you, that's all I was saying. The rest is fairly incidental to me. As long as I don't write official novels, my version of Star Trek is not beholden to canon.

The bottom line is, movies cannot be expected to be entirely logical, coherent, or intelligent stories, especially in this day and age. They're a particular class of storytelling that demands extreme narrative shorthand and an emphasis on the immediacy of the moment. They make huge leaps of plot and logic that you typically wouldn't find in a book or a TV series. That's because they have such a limited amount of time to tell such big stories. It's just an inherent attribute of the medium. And the modern climate of moviemaking exacerbates it in a lot of ways -- by the demands of relentless pacing, and by a climate where the director is god and scripts are considered disposable so that narrative logic is routinely discarded in favor of moments of coolness.

This I agree with, but didn't you already refute JarodRussel's point earlier? It's a completely fair point, but it does sound kinda familiar. (I suppose in a thread this long, some things can be restated.)

So this is probably the smartest, most coherent ST feature film we could've realistically expected anyone in Hollywood to make.

I really, really hope you're wrong about that. Aren't you a little worried that movies are just gonna get stupider and stupider until they don't make any coherent sense at all? Maybe that's a bit fatalistic, but it does seem like that's what they're aiming for.

So me, I'm grateful we got as good a movie as we did. I don't think anyone could've realistically done better given the nature of the feature film industry today.

That sounds more like a reason to be depressed, not grateful. Granted, about the movie industry, not Star Trek. I just saw the A-Team movie, and I found it very reminiscent of STXI (in all the ways I disliked, although the main characters were more likable). Made by a whole different creative crew, of course. I'll be glad to accept that the problems I have with the movie are a product of the soul-sucking entertainment industry, and not Abrams personally.
 
However, the more the filmmakers play along with this, the worse it gets. At some point, someone is going to take a deep breath, step back from the cutting edge and make the movie they want to make, rather than the one they feel they HAVE to. And it will be just as, if not more, successful. Until then, Star Trek will be a popcorn movie. Which is sad because the new fans that they are attracting won't know the true depth it's capable of.

QFT. I'm forced to accept that this style of movie is the way it is, but it is neither the way it should be, nor the way it could be.

...the Ridley Scott Robin Hood film that came out a few weeks ago and promptly bombed.

Would it sound mean-spirited if I said I was very happy about that?

The same shit happened in Star Trek 2009, too. Orci/Kurtzman wanted to have Spock and Uhura do the Vulcan finger touching, yet Abrams insisted the audience wouldn't get it, so they started kissing. Wonderful TMP style interiors were designed, for example for the engine room, but Abrams wanted the apple store and a brewery/factory aboard the ship. Church had an initial design for the Enterprise that looked like a perfect update to the TOS Enterprise. But Abrams wanted the hot rod.

Oh man, now you're gonna make to take back what I said about it not being Abrams' fault!

I think you have a rather weird prejudiced impression of "Hollywood".
One could say the same about your rare opinion of the movie. JJ's product seemingly pleased most people, most pro reviewers and most fans.

Hey, I don't know about Jarod, but I have no myths about my opinions being rare. I just don't feel that makes them any less valid.

I'm hoping for a USS Kelvin prequel novel(/novel series) at some point.

I'd read that! :techman:
 
This is an interpretation of Kirk by a team of actor, writers, and director who haven't interpreted the character before, so naturally they bring something new in their approach to that character. What they see in the character isn't going to be the same thing other people see, so not every fan is going to agree with their way of interpreting the character. There have been stories that have interpreted Kirk in ways I don't agree with. But Kirk is not a character defined by a single story. All the different interpretations are just different facets of the whole.


So this is probably the smartest, most coherent ST feature film we could've realistically expected anyone in Hollywood to make. Yes, it has logic flaws, but in the hands of a typical Hollywood feature director and production team they would've probably been far worse. So me, I'm grateful we got as good a movie as we did. I don't think anyone could've realistically done better given the nature of the feature film industry today.

In regards to Kirk, they didn't really bring anything new to the character. They just played up the superficial aspects that people think Kirk is like. He never follows orders and he sleeps with, or at least tries to, every woman he meets. Rather than show that he's a well rounded character they just played up the stereotype.

And if this is the smartest, most coherent we can expect they I really worry that the franchise will be down to Transformers level before too long.
 
I didn't mean actually writing them at this moment. I meant formulating ideas to pitch. Sort of a "once bitten, twice shy" sort of thing. I should have been clearer. I can't imagine how frustrating it must be to actually have it written and scheduled and the pulled at the last minute. And not once, but four times.


Understood. But, like Christopher said, it's not like we were going to being doing that anyway, unless it looked like it might lead to a job down the road. I don't spend a lot of time dreaming up STAR WARS or BATTLESTAR GALACTICA plots either, but I would if approached. You go where the work is.

I really enjoyed writing my nuTrek novel. If and when I have a chance to so again, I'll jump at the opportunity.

In the meantime, I have a CSI book to revise . . . .

Incidentally, I not trying to jump all over you on this. It's just that, whenever I do book signings and conventions and such, I'm always surprised at how many people think that we write the tie-in books first, then try to sell them. It's a very common, and dangerous, misconception which I like to clear up every chance I get!

Again, I wasn't suggesting you were. I know professional authors who think up ideas all the time and file them away. later, they pull them out and update them and file them away again. One calls it his "Idea Larder". I suppose that I was just thinking that some authors did the same thing.
 
^ Oh, that sort of thing happens all the time. The key is that we don't obsess on such things. We have an idea, it goes in a file, and then we keep moving, because we have other work to do. :)

FWIW, I've had a couple of thoughts on what I might want to do with a "nuTrek novel," and if they greenlight novels set before the events of the film, then I'll likely pitch one or two of those ideas toward the editor. But, until I hear that such ideas are being solicited, I'm not worrying about it, as I've got plenty to keep me busy.
 
On a personal level, I was annoyed at the cancellation of the four novels' release, because I was looking forward to reading more material set in the new timeline (and yes, I've also had a couple of ideas for stories set in that timeline).

If TPTB aren't sure when the next movie will be set, though, I totally get it. If ST XII begins the day after ST XI and ends with Sulu leaving to serve as first officer on that timeline's version of the Excelsior (as one random example), these four novels featuring (I presume) Sulu staying where he is suddenly seem pretty pointless and "wrong."

Yes, we all realise that these sorts of contradictions have already happened in the novels with regards to canon and each other, and prequels also run the possibility (albeit a lesser one) of being rendered moot this way, but (as Christopher started to say) it seems like the current Supreme Court is more concerned about maintaining consistency with the tie-in material going forward.

Along with the other ways they tried to emulate the Star Wars model, it's even possible they'll opt for a more formal "Expanded Universe" approach to the new timeline.
 
All of this talk about how the Trek09 was a action movie, and the way Hollywood treats those kinds of actions movie got me wondering what would happen they were to do a more serious dramatic Trek movie. Basically something more along the lines of episodes like The Inner Light or In the Pale Moonlight, because as much as I loved the movies like Wrath of Khan, First Contact, and ST09, (which I did, they are three of my absolute favorite movies period) those the kinds of serious dramatic stories are when Trek is at it's best.
 
All of this talk about how the Trek09 was a action movie, and the way Hollywood treats those kinds of actions movie got me wondering what would happen they were to do a more serious dramatic Trek movie. Basically something more along the lines of episodes like The Inner Light or In the Pale Moonlight, because as much as I loved the movies like Wrath of Khan, First Contact, and ST09, (which I did, they are three of my absolute favorite movies period) those the kinds of serious dramatic stories are when Trek is at it's best.

They would not never greenlight such a movie, but these ideas, properly executed, would work perfectly.
 
Some idiot has decided that "only JJ Abrams can tell new Star Trek stories" :rolleyes:

Not "some idiot" at all.

You and I both know how much wailing there'd be if the four sequel novels somehow failed to accurately set up events in the next two films. (Some people never forgave DC Comics for their valiant "The Doomsday Bug" comic arc, which had to reset the status quo between their ST III and ST IV adaptations. Let alone the grief people give to "TNG: Ghost Ship" and any VOY novel that calls the EMH by the name of Zimmerman.)

Holding off on sequel novels is probably a Very Sensible Move. A pity for Pocket, who tried to be ready with four stories in the wings. But those stories in cold storage aren't going anywhere - and we've seen several "lost novels" get resurrected in the past.
 
I don't see any spinoffs for Batman, Spider-Man, or any of the other big explosive action movies that most closely resemble the format that this Star Trek movie had (unless you count cartoons).

Why on Earth wouldn't you count cartoons? Those just prove the point. It's hard to find a superhero film franchise today that hasn't had an animated tie-in timed to come out in synergy with its film sequels. (Although I think they were developing a Hulk animated series that was scrapped when the first movie did poorly, or something.)


Sure, 2-4 were big action movies, but they were moderately successful B-movies, and besides, the glory days of TV Trek were still fresh in some people's minds (especially since it was cleaning up in syndication for many years after cancellation).

Yeah, but Roddenberry had been trying to get Trek back onto TV for years with no success. It was the popularity of the film series that finally got it to happen, or at least played a significant role in the decision. TVH was a very successful movie, as Trek movies go, and it was only very shortly after it came out that Paramount gave TNG the go-ahead.


So this is probably the smartest, most coherent ST feature film we could've realistically expected anyone in Hollywood to make.

I really, really hope you're wrong about that. Aren't you a little worried that movies are just gonna get stupider and stupider until they don't make any coherent sense at all? Maybe that's a bit fatalistic, but it does seem like that's what they're aiming for.

Well, I'm a writer, so naturally I think that as long as writers are powerless and scripts are considered nothing more than suggestions, the storytelling in feature films is not going to be as strong as it could or should be.

And I do think ST'09 is a smart film. It has some big logic holes in the plot that could've been easily fixed, but some of those are the result of the insanely tight editing and pacing that's another systemic flaw of the modern film industry, resulting in a lot of important exposition being left out. (For instance, Spock Prime's line explaining how his meeting Kirk and Scott was evidence of the timeline trying to repair itself, i.e. of quantum probability tending toward the most likely path.) And most of all, the story is character-driven, and the characters' emotions and reactions are believable, which automatically makes it a lot smarter than most action movies. (Remember what I said about Abrams' priorities, focusing on character during the big action set pieces? I got Terminator Salvation from the library the other day, and I was struck by how it was the exact opposite: the director's focus and attention were emphatically on the big action and explosions, and the characters were essentially incidental, getting no development at all.) Yes, it could've been smarter if it had been freer to leave in more explanations and not compress its pacing so much, but it's still a smart movie overall.


On Abrams going with kissing instead of finger-touching, that made perfect sense. Again, it wasn't his job to cater to the people who are already fans, but to introduce the franchise to new audiences. A kiss was a lot more communicative to the general audience than an alien finger-touching gesture would be. And I think it works better even aside from that, because it underlines that Uhura is the one initiating things and taking charge, and tapping into Spock's human side.


All of this talk about how the Trek09 was a action movie, and the way Hollywood treats those kinds of actions movie got me wondering what would happen they were to do a more serious dramatic Trek movie. Basically something more along the lines of episodes like The Inner Light or In the Pale Moonlight, because as much as I loved the movies like Wrath of Khan, First Contact, and ST09, (which I did, they are three of my absolute favorite movies period) those the kinds of serious dramatic stories are when Trek is at it's best.

Again, I think it's important to stress that my point about how the feature-film industry devalues scripts is not about action movies alone, but about all movies. It's endemic to the culture. Directors are god, they're allowed to do anything they want even if everyone around them knows it's a bad idea, and nobody has any power to keep a director from tearing a brilliant script to ribbons because they imagine they have a better idea or just want to put their personal "stamp" on it. I'm sure that undermines just as many dramas and comedies as it does action films.

But yes, I would be happier if the model for Trek movies that had succeeded had been in the more intellectual, thoughtful science fiction vein of TMP rather than the over-the-top space opera model of TWOK.

Still, if it's going to be an action movie, I think J. J. Abrams is a good choice to direct it, because he does really impressive action while also balancing it very well with character. And because he comes from TV and thus treats writers as true collaborators rather than just hired help.
 
All of this talk about how the Trek09 was a action movie, and the way Hollywood treats those kinds of actions movie got me wondering what would happen they were to do a more serious dramatic Trek movie. Basically something more along the lines of episodes like The Inner Light or In the Pale Moonlight, because as much as I loved the movies like Wrath of Khan, First Contact, and ST09, (which I did, they are three of my absolute favorite movies period) those the kinds of serious dramatic stories are when Trek is at it's best.

A serious, dramatic Trek movie would be great. However, I can't see it happening. Trek is now part of the "blow things up, real good" summer blockbuster crowd. If anything, I can see it being even more-so in the sequel. "It worked for the last one, why mess with success?" is probably where the thoughts of the Supreme Court & the studio are now. And who can blame them? It's not about making the best movie, it's about making the one that makes the most money. If popularity was the only thing that determined quality, McDonalds would be named the best restaurant year after year.

Personally, I don't mind fast food from time to time but I'd rather have a really good meal that the most popular one.
 
I didn't mean actually writing them at this moment. I meant formulating ideas to pitch. Sort of a "once bitten, twice shy" sort of thing. I should have been clearer. I can't imagine how frustrating it must be to actually have it written and scheduled and the pulled at the last minute. And not once, but four times.


Understood. But, like Christopher said, it's not like we were going to being doing that anyway, unless it looked like it might lead to a job down the road. I don't spend a lot of time dreaming up STAR WARS or BATTLESTAR GALACTICA plots either, but I would if approached. You go where the work is.

I really enjoyed writing my nuTrek novel. If and when I have a chance to so again, I'll jump at the opportunity.

In the meantime, I have a CSI book to revise . . . .

Incidentally, I not trying to jump all over you on this. It's just that, whenever I do book signings and conventions and such, I'm always surprised at how many people think that we write the tie-in books first, then try to sell them. It's a very common, and dangerous, misconception which I like to clear up every chance I get!

Again, I wasn't suggesting you were. I know professional authors who think up ideas all the time and file them away. later, they pull them out and update them and file them away again. One calls it his "Idea Larder". I suppose that I was just thinking that some authors did the same thing.


Oh yeah, I've got a "brainstorming file," too, where I toss random ideas, titles, and newspaper clippings, but that's second nature at this point. There's no hardship involved in not being able to write for a specific series. If I can't use an idea for one series, I'll just use it for another.

After my nuTrek book was pulled from the schedule, I admit I sulked for a weekend, but then I got back on the horse and sent Pocket a proposal for a completely different TOS book . . . .

Projects that fall through or never come to fruition are just part of the job.
 
On Abrams going with kissing instead of finger-touching, that made perfect sense. Again, it wasn't his job to cater to the people who are already fans, but to introduce the franchise to new audiences. A kiss was a lot more communicative to the general audience than an alien finger-touching gesture would be.

Where is the difference between doing it now the "first time" and doing it the first time in the 60s? The audience today is supposed to be dumber than the audience in the 60s?

And since I've seen The Search for Spock long before I saw the TOS episode, I know that you don't need any background to understand it. And it would have been pretty much self explanatory within the context of a) Uhura loving the guy, b) Uhura being interested in alien languages and cultures and c) Spock being an alien. Plus the scene on the transporter platform with Kirk being also puzzled because he also sees it for the first time would have been perfect for introducing it.
 
Greg Cox said:
Oh yeah, I've got a "brainstorming file," too, where I toss random ideas, titles, and newspaper clippings, but that's just part of the job. There's no hardship involved in not being able to write for a specific series. If I can't use an idea for one series, I'll just use it for another . . . .

(My recent TERMINATOR book is based loosely on an old, unsold FIREFLY outline.)

Yep. The story I recently sold to an SF anthology was based on an idea that Marco originally rejected (in a much different form) for the Constellations anthology, and which I'd also reworked and sent in to Tokyopop when the editor there asked Kevin and me to submit ideas for one of the Star Trek Manga volumes (that was before the staff shakeups there, and when I didn't hear from anybody for over a year after that happened, I figured they'd lost our packet, or decided they didn't like it and just didn't get around to telling us.).

Moral of the story: Never throw anything away. You never know when it might prove useful. :techman:

JarodRussell said:
Where is the difference between doing it now the "first time" and doing it the first time in the 60s? The audience today is supposed to be dumber than the audience in the 60s?

Because that wasn't the point of the scene. Spock was emotionally traumatized by all that had just happened, and Uhura reached out to him in an all-too human gesture of love and support, one that resonates more with the audience than if they'd stood there, stone-faced and touching fingers. The scene is even more effective because Spock abandons his Vulcan facade in order to allow her to comfort him, if only for a brief moment before reasserting his bearing and returning his attention to the matters at hand.

Yes, it might irk some folks who wished they'd done the Sarek/Amanda finger thing, but from a storytelling standpoint and that need to "decompress" after the extended action set piece, it was bang on.

Just my $.02
 
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Where is the difference between doing it now the "first time" and doing it the first time in the 60s? The audience today is supposed to be dumber than the audience in the 60s?

It's also about turning fan expectations on their head. When I saw Spock and Uhura approaching I fully expected finger stroking, but there was a very human kiss instead! Woah! This version of Spock exploring things differently! (How Chapel Prime would have pined!)

I also expected Sarek to die (when I realised Amanda was not gonna make it) and then for Spock Prime to either die battling Nero or return to his own timeline at the end.
 
Where is the difference between doing it now the "first time" and doing it the first time in the 60s? The audience today is supposed to be dumber than the audience in the 60s?

It's also about turning fan expectations on their head.

That would be correct if it were true. But turning Trek fan's expectations upside down wasn't the reason for leaving it out.

The reason is that they constantly underestimate the target audience. Which is why they "dumbed down" the Stardates, for example, too. I wonder why the audiences in the 60s had no trouble when they were being confronted with new things the first time...



JarodRussell said:
Where is the difference between doing it now the "first time" and doing it the first time in the 60s? The audience today is supposed to be dumber than the audience in the 60s?

Because that wasn't the point of the scene. Spock was emotionally traumatized by all that had just happened, and Uhura reached out to him in an all-too human gesture of love and support, one that resonates more with the audience than if they'd stood there, stone-faced and touching fingers. The scene is even more effective because Spock abandons his Vulcan facade in order to allow her to comfort him, if only for a brief moment before reasserting his bearing and returning his attention to the matters at hand.

Yes, it might irk some folks who wished they'd done the Sarek/Amanda finger thing, but from a storytelling standpoint and that need to "decompress" after the extended action set piece, it was bang on.

Just my $.02

SpocksinnerConflict: Was there a reason you had Spock and Uhura show their affection in a traditional human way, as opposed to the Sarek and Amanda Vulcan finger touching usually associated with Vulcan love?
BobOrci: We actually debated that very thing, wondering if the finger ceremony would be better in the elevator, but JJ correctly pointed out that a new audience would have no idea what was going on.

http://trekmovie.com/2009/05/22/orci-and-kurtzman-reveal-star-trek-details-in-trekmovie-fan-qa/

No storytelling reason here. It really is just about Abrams thinking his target audience is dumber than a slice of bread. Where the hell did he get that idea from? I mean he's the creator of LOST for crying out loud. I wonder what he thinks is the IQ difference between those two audiences.
 
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I think it would be good if any spin-off literature set in the new continuity of ST XI would try and offer some explanations for the errors that are in the movie (e.g. the oft-discussed inconsistent speeds of the NuEnterprise, why the Klingons didn't adapt the Narada's tech, etc). Other books have addressed such issues in past movies and series, a good example being the great Greg Cox, whose Khan novel To Reign in Hell provided an explanation for the radical difference in the Augments of "Space Seed" and TWOK, and how the USS Reliant crew mistook Ceti Alpha V for Ceti Alpha VI. The authors of the ENT novel The Good That Men Do also helped fix a great many of the problems of the ENT finale.

I think there is lots of room in the novels to explain some of the inconsistencies, but I think it's WAAAY too early to start writing fiction about this Trek 2.0 universe, as not enough has been established on screen yet. I myself wouldn't buy any books set in that "new universe", because I learned my lesson in the 1980s, when the subsequent original Trek movies and new series would end up contradicting what had been established in all the literature I had bought, making me feel like I had wasted my saving... No, now that I'm older, I will be happy to wait until more is established onscreen.

(I was so frustrated back in the 1980s and 1990s when ST: TNG contradicted so many of the elements of Romulan history established in the novel, The Romulan Way, which I thought was a much more interesting take on the Romulans as opposed to the police-state feel of the TNG Romulus of "Unification").
 
JarodRussell;4160767The reason is that they constantly underestimate the target audience. Which is why they "dumbed down" the Stardates said:
:eek::lol:
actually they did. it was one of the things gene was bugged about over and over.

he only threw out a sort of excplanation after he got so much stuff about it.

even then it bothered some people/
 
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