I'm interested in literally every single Trek line going right now... I can honestly say I'm not even the slightest bit curious about Phase II novels.
Shrug.
I don't see "Phase II" novels happening
now. Ordover floated his trial balloon in '98, and nothing ever came of it. He's left Pocket far behind, and the novel line is under a different regime now, with different goals than he had.
I suspect that Ordover's reason for considering "Phase II" was that it opened up a
New Frontier-like storytelling possibility for the original series characters.
New Frontier had launched the year before, and it had been extraordinarily successful. He was probably looking to catch lightning in the bottle again, and "Phase II" offered possibilities. Xon, Decker, and Ilia could all be defined because they were, essentially, original-to-novels characters. Also, because this was an alternate timeline, literally
anything could happen to the other characters. Much like the new movie did, the storytelling slate was wiped clean.
Ordover had an interesting view about
TOS that I gleaned from conversations online over the years. There were only two periods that he saw as being worthwhile as a storytelling setting -- the classic five-year mission, and post-
Star Trek VI. Unless the story absolutely demanded that it fit
anywhere else (like
New Earth could only go after
Star Trek: The Motion Picture, though more for the amount of time it spanned rather than anything intrinsic to the story that was told), the story would default to either the classic period or the end of the movie era. His argument against books set post-
TMP or post-
Star Trek V was that there was nothing inherently unique about them, except that the characters were older. So a standard, run-of-the-mill boldly going novel should go in the 2260s, while a novel that tries to grow the characters, much like a post-finale novel we'd see today, would have to go at the end of the movies. And also, it had to have Kirk in it. The
Generations prologue was the end of the line, and
The Captain's Daughter's poor sales showed that audiences wouldn't buy classic
Star Trek novels if they didn't have the captain front and center.
Now, it's entirely possible that I misread J.J. over the years, yet that's the view I had of his editorial philosophy where the original series was concerned. Which is why, I think, he found "Phase II" an idea at least worth
considering. It gave him the benefits of an original-to-novels series like
New Frontier, with recognizable characters who were still young and vibrant. Years later, he would latch onto the "lower decks" approach.
A decade-plus on, I still wonder what he had in mind. I know how I'd have launched a "Phase II" series. It would have been really cool. A little fanwanky. But still cool.
