I had no idea the Ishmael characters came from anywhere else! I've never seen HCTB, but I don't recall being lost back when I read it.
Exactly my point.
HCTB is a western/sitcom, and a highly fictionalized version of the early history of Seattle, Washington (for the real [and uncensored] history, I recommend two books by the late Seattle historian, Bill Speidel, namely
Sons of the Profits (and no, that's not a typo!) and
Doc Maynard.)
HCTB has got a lot of conflation and reshuffling of the actual historic figures, and
Ishmael is based on the HCTB version, rather than the historic one. The basic premise and milieu of HCTB is pretty well stated in Ishmael: the Bolt Brothers (two of which were played by ST guest stars!) ran a logging operation in pre-Statehood Seattle, and Aaron Stempel (spelled "Stemple" in
Ishmael, and played by none other than Mark Lenard) owned the sawmill. With the loggers threatening to seek their fortunes elsewhere, for lack of female companionship, the Bolt Brothers went back East (to New Bedford, MA) to recruit women to join the settlement. There was an ownership dispute between the Bolt Brothers and Stempel, with respect to a timber-rich mountain, which they resolved with a bet: if all the women were at least spoken-for by a specified deadline, the Bolt Brothers would keep the mountain; if not, it would go to Stempel.
The 1968 popular song, "Seattle," started out as the open/close music for HCTB.
Most of the known Easter eggs are mentioned in the
Review Thread. As I recall, there are Easter eggs for
Maverick and
Have Gun, Will Travel. Maybe also for
Kung Fu. And there's at least one cameo by an actual historic figure, "Emperor" Norton. And even
Dr. Who and
Star Wars Easter eggs. (And to reiterate something I said in the review thread, I'd like to see another appearance by a Drelb, either Steiner or another of her species. Preferably an on-screen appearance.
Planet X, by contrast, doesn't have much exposition at all, with regard to who the X-Men are, and where they came from, or even how Picard & co. came to know them (in the crossover comic book, of course). Neither, I suppose, did MJF make it any easier on X-Men fans who had never seen an episode of TNG. Probably one of the reasons why this is only my second time reading
Planet X, whereas I think I had to break out the Scotch Book Tape on my copy of
Ishmael.
(And if the current series of ST TPBs is made out of more stable stock than the MMPBs that preceded them, then it's worth the extra money.)