I do not appreciate the PU timeline to be retconned to fit our universe better. Our universe is highly unlikely to be that of the PU.
I didn't make it that far into SNW, but I remember their first episode establishing that the US entered into a second civil war during the 2020s. If they wanted to clean up the timeline, they gave themselves very little runway. At least TOS gave their original Eugenics Wars 20+ years of room to breathe.I wouldn't say "still," since the point of "Tomorrow and..." was to bring Trek's 21st-century history into line with our current reality, rather than the TOS reality where by this point we'd lived through the Eugenics Wars, sent a crewed mission to Saturn, launched Nomad into interstellar space, abandoned interplanetary sleeper ships for faster drives, etc. So a story depicting "our" 2020s is set in the revised Trek timeline, not the original one.
It’ll be fun when we get to 2063.I do not appreciate the PU timeline to be retconned to fit our universe better. Our universe is highly unlikely to be that of the PU.
Interesting. I remember Enterprise getting some flak for the whole Temporal Cold War plot at the time it came out. I remember some fans complaining about it for various reasons. But in a way that's what gives an in universe explanation for why things haven't unfolded in our 'real world' as they did in the original timeline laid out for Star Trek (granted that original history wasn't always consistent within itself either). Or put another way it gives the writers a way to make Star Trek history consistent with the real world using an in universe plot device.
When I revisited the first couple of seasons of The Six Million Dollar Man some years back, it was an aching reminder of how optimistic we were about the future of the space program when I was a kid. It had episodes about new Moon missions, a space station, even a Mars mission, I think (though I didn't get that far in my rewatch), and at the time, it didn't seem that far removed from reality, just maybe a little bit ahead of schedule. We really dropped the ball.As an aside it's a shame our progress in space exploration has made such little progress since the moon landings. Where so many sci-fi writers from the 1960s (including Star Trek) thought we'd be by now is obviously pretty far off. According to Star Trek history alone we should already have interstellar planetary ships by now and sleeper ships, and IIRC Mars exploration was already started by now.
I didn't make it that far into SNW, but I remember their first episode establishing that the US entered into a second civil war during the 2020s. If they wanted to clean up the timeline, they gave themselves very little runway.
At least TOS gave their original Eugenics Wars 20+ years of room to breathe.
That is not, in fact, the case. It's clear that when it comes to the 23rd century, SNW is determined to conform as closely as possible to the continuity of TOS, right down to contriving an excuse for Pike to be a temporary fleet captain when Kirk meets him, and making sure that Chapel meets Roger Korby on schedule. The intention is that only the history of the 20th-21st century has been revised to conform more closely to ours, eventually converging onto a 23rd-24th century that's essentially identical to the one we know (just without the '60s sexism and set designs).Although it is nice to see more people accepting that SNW is an alternate timeline...
I doubt it. There isn't really a novel continuity anymore to set things up for, and even when there was, Greg Cox's novels were almost always standalone, aside from the loose connection between Assignment Eternity and the Eugenics Wars novels.I really enjoyed the novel, and now I hope it sells well and Melissa Silver becomes to Star Trek novels what Holly Gibney became to Stephen King novels. (At least I got the feeling that something's being set up here.)
I don’t know… talking about how 2024 was handled relates to the book I feel.Hi all,
Some thread drift is natural, and of course it makes sense to compare elements of the books to elements of the shows. But much like the Pliable Truths thread recently, this discussion seems to have lost any connection to the book, and is just discussing the shows. We have other forums for discussing the shows. Let's please try to get the focus of the thread back on the book itself.
I don’t know… talking about how 2024 was handled relates to the book I feel.
I feel like there's a decent chance of the Osori at least getting referenced again at some point, if not becoming Greg's version of the Grigari from the Reeves-Stevenses novels.I doubt it. There isn't really a novel continuity anymore to set things up for, and even when there was, Greg Cox's novels were almost always standalone, aside from the loose connection between Assignment Eternity and the Eugenics Wars novels.
The only thing that confused me was the half human, half Andorian lady. I don’t think the 4 gender thing has been retconned yet in the nuTrek shows. If anything Lower Decks hinted that it might still be a thing by revealing Jennifer’s full name, indicating that she’s a Shen.
The only thing that confused me was the half human, half Andorian lady. I don’t think the 4 gender thing has been retconned yet in the nuTrek shows. If anything Lower Decks hinted that it might still be a thing by revealing Jennifer’s full name, indicating that she’s a Shen.
Could have used one of these Orion variants that are blue.As far as I know, nothing has been retconned and there has been no sweeping official mandate on the topic. That was just me not worrying about the four-gender thing, probably because I was mostly in full TOS mode when I wrote that book and wasn't really thinking about the latter-day shows all that much. Mea culpa.
I needed Dr. Hamparian to be visually distinctive for plot reasons, so my brain went straight to blue skin and antennae -- as seen on TOS. And, as I recall, I made her half-human because I didn't want her to look too alien on Atraz.
She needed to stand out from the crowd, but not too much, so half-Andorian filled the bill. And that was pretty much the extent of my reasoning there. Honest.
(I flirted with making her a cyborg, with visible prosthetics, but that's not really a TOS thing, so I went with half-Andorian instead.)
I doubt it. There isn't really a novel continuity anymore to set things up for, and even when there was, Greg Cox's novels were almost always standalone, aside from the loose connection between Assignment Eternity and the Eugenics Wars novels.
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