I think that's how I will now have to imagine him. The idea of a newborn giving out commands to Riker is pretty funny(well, unless you picture the baby in Friday's child, but that's not how I see Akkar).

I think that's how I will now have to imagine him. The idea of a newborn giving out commands to Riker is pretty funny(well, unless you picture the baby in Friday's child, but that's not how I see Akkar).
Did Vonda McIntyre come up with the origin for Saavik on her own? I thought I heard somewhere that it came from a deleted scene.I wasn't the first to do so. Pretty much every prior Trek Lit or comics tale about the Stargazer had used the characters Mike Friedman introduced in TNG: Reunion.
It's interesting... There are some things that different tie-in authors establish differently, but there are others that just become the unquestioned default used by virtually everyone, like Vonda McIntyre's Saavik origin from the TWOK novelization, or Friedman's Stargazer crew. Not out of any formal policy or anything, but just because everyone ends up choosing to use it.
Technically we have also seen Akkar, he's on the cover for The Red King.I mean, in general authors of any books have to do that. After all many novels are never seen on screen. But in Star Trek's case, they have to create new characters alongside characters we have seen on screen. And then try to portray them as having the same importance on the ship as established characters. Chen, for instance, is sort of a protégé, or project of Captain Picards, so we have to be able to envision her with Picard. Or when Admiral Akaar dresses down Captain Picard for his involvement in the Tezwa affair. He is an imposing presence in the novels, but is not a character we've ever seen (well, unless you picture the baby in Friday's child, but that's not how I see Akkar).
Did Vonda McIntyre come up with the origin for Saavik on her own? I thought I heard somewhere that it came from a deleted scene.
Sorry, hit post too soon. I just wanted to add that it makes those characters more 3 dimensional.
Even though it's technically not canon, I find it even enriches the episodes I see them in more.
Rosetta was a good book, and I believe one of the only Enterprise novels to take place during the 4th season (if I'm remembering correctly it's the last book before they started the relaunch novels).
Just finished re-reading our Christopher Bennett's Ex-Machina, which is every bit as great as I remembered it. I love the exploration of that under-utilized era, the rich development of the alien culture and politics, the characterizations of the cast, especially Spock. It's the kind of book that reminds me why I love Trek.
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