Does a book have to prominently feature big characters?
The only people we'd see in a Eugenics Wars anthology would be guest characters.
What isn't self-explanatory? You would not see a main character in a story set during the Eugenics Wars.The only people we'd see in a Eugenics Wars anthology would be guest characters.
Explain?
The only people we'd see in a Eugenics Wars anthology would be guest characters.
Explain?
I don't see it as likely, honestly. Pocket would have to be convinced they could make money off such a book, and it lacks major series characters. You have Khan, Gary Seven, and that's about it....
Except TotDW dealt with events that directly affected main characters from most of the series. The only people we'd see in a Eugenics Wars anthology would be guest characters. And Greg already pretty much used every established Trek character who was alive in the late 20th century in the EW duology. So who'd be left?
I reckon it would be cool if Pocket were to produce a Tales of the Eugenics Wars short story anthology, maybe drawing off some of Greg Cox's fiction and expanding it to characters and situations not seen in the novels.
^Greg's novels don't ignore anything from TOS, they merely finesse its interpretation in order to reconcile it with real 1990s history (at least as perceived by Americans). It is possible that 23rd-century historians could see the events of the 1990s very differently from those who lived them, because of the secret knowledge they've since become aware of and the efforts intervening historians have made to organize and systematize what people at the time might've experienced as a series of seemingly unrelated events.
And I still say that it's entirely possible to interpret the Eugenics Wars novels as depicting an overt set of events. There's not too much emphasis in the text on efforts to keep these events secret -- some here and there, but not pervasively -- so it's easy enough to read it as a reasonably open conflict. I mean, even if we Americans weren't aware of Khan's rise to power (and there's plenty of precedent for the American public being almost completely uninformed about major world events that don't affect them directly, such as the civil wars that devastated much of Africa in the 1990s), surely the people he ruled knew about it. And there were some things in the book that couldn't have been kept secret, like the nerve gas attack on the Palais des Nations.
That said, though, I agree (as I said earlier in the thread) that there could be value in exploring an alternative take on the Eugenics Wars. Not because there's anything wrong with Greg's version, but because there's room for multiple takes on the same concept, and no reason all Trek Lit has to be in a single continuity.
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