And that's the point of an ongoing saga. To keep you coming back for more.
That denotes some sort of regular ongoing series. Not a plot left dangling mid arc with no firm plan to pick it up again anytime soon...
And that's the point of an ongoing saga. To keep you coming back for more.
I'm also looking to find out what happened when Taran'atar answers the distress call from the Even Odds crew. Perhaps we'll get that in 2013.
That denotes some sort of regular ongoing series. Not a plot left dangling mid arc with no firm plan to pick it up again anytime soon...
That's one thing, but building up a story arc over several books and then just leaving it to hang is quite another.
Why did the original plans go into flux? Just because the showrunner (Marco) was dropped, Margaret could have continued with his plan for Deep Space Nine but, IMHO, she was overworked and possibly felt that it would ease her burden if she could bring everything into the same time frame.
Marco kept the TV series' serialized arc in the novels and it made it just just like watching the TV again, which was great. It was a wonderful creative direction to go in. Margaret artificially bringing DS9 forward felt like a punch in the gut to me, personally, after getting used to the new characters bought into the franchise.
I would have been happier had she done a Full Circle-esque novel and then bought it forward, but it seems a moot point anyway.
I don't believe she would have been "copying" Marco's creative direction, just continuing it.
I didn't see any reason to shoehorn DS9 into Destiny, because even though it was a devastating invasion, Bajor/DS9 wasn't even affected (being outside of the core worlds).
From some of DRGIII's comments before he left the boards, it sounds like the longterm plan will be to eventually do a reunion story of some kind.
Personally, I would have maintained the serial arc of the relaunch and adjusted it to fit my tastes.What if it had been you? Try looking at it from the editor's perspective. Say you've just taken over a job from a predecessor who was highly regarded for his work. Would you be content to settle for trying to carry forward with his policies and plans and have to live under his shadow? Or would you rather start something new that was distinctly your own and leave your own mark on the job, so that people would end up talking about your own achievements rather than just how well you did at following in the other guy's footsteps?
That's circular reasoning. The whole reason Dave plotted it so that Bajor wasn't affected was because of the mandate to leave DS9 out of it. If he'd been free to include the DS9 characters, then he would've plotted Destiny differently. It could've been as simple as putting the Borg's conduit exit someplace closer to the Alpha Quadrant rather than using the Azure Nebula.
Enterprise and Voyager are the stepchildren, I would think. DS9 was easily the best of the three 24th century shows, to me anyway....it would unfairly marginalize a series that already suffers from being the redheaded stepchild of the franchise.
Enterprise and Voyager are the stepchildren, I would think. DS9 was easily the best of the three 24th century shows, to me anyway....it would unfairly marginalize a series that already suffers from being the redheaded stepchild of the franchise.
Personally, I would have maintained the serial arc of the relaunch and adjusted it to fit my tastes.
There is absolutely no reason why Destiny couldn't have included DS9, and hints could have been dropped at events that happened previously (which is exactly what happened with Dax et al. and during ZSG and RBoE)
Or maybe she felt that she was entitled to bring her own creative vision to the series rather than just trying to copy what someone else did. And given that Marco and Margaret have very different approaches, that makes sense.
Christopher, from the blurb of Raise the Dawn, it looks as though Plagues of Night might be the Ascendants arc coming to an end so I'm not as worried as I once was.
Let's see what happens.
PoN could be a framing story. Anyway, I know that everything is speculation at this point but I have enough going on in my life without needing to dwell on the narrative gaps of, or continuation of, DS9. Whatever happens, happens, and I'll read it either way.Christopher, from the blurb of Raise the Dawn, it looks as though Plagues of Night might be the Ascendants arc coming to an end so I'm not as worried as I once was.
Let's see what happens.
That's pure speculation at this point; there are any number of other things it could be as well.
And I don't see what it has to do with my point, because David's trilogy is still evidently moving the story forward and staying in the Typhon Pact timeframe. Even if it does follow up on the Ascendants in some way, there's no evidence that it would do so via flashback.
That's what you would've done, but Margaret isn't you. It's the nature of the world that different people make different choices. And no matter which choice had been made, there'd be just as many people complaining about it. There were valid arguments for both possibilities. Either option had its benefits and its drawbacks. It was a judgment call, and since Marco and Margaret are different people, they weighed the priorities differently.
Personally I can't understand why DS9 should need to be in the same timeline as other series in the first place. What does it matter?
This seems silly to me. To suggest that Margaret should completely ignore everything that had been established with the DS9 books to bring it into line with the rest of the Trek fiction, because following on with the story in her own manner would upset people doesn't even make sense.
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