I'd guess that they would be less likely to invest in an ongoing series than they would in a one off novel.
But people still ask, "What episodes do I need to see to understand all the nuances of this novel?"
I'd guess that they would be less likely to invest in an ongoing series than they would in a one off novel.
I'd guess that they would be less likely to invest in an ongoing series than they would in a one off novel.
But people still ask, "What episodes do I need to see to understand all the nuances of this novel?"
But the episodes exist, are in the can, and at this moment in time, new ones aren't being made. There's a difference between novels referring to television episodes and referring to each other.
as with less cash to spend, casual readers will be less likely to embark on a trilogy instead of take a chance on a single novel.
a duology, sitting side by side in a shop
The "casual" buyer is the wider audience. There's far more people buying a book now and again than dedicated, collecting-all-books fanboys. Or at least there should be. Doctor Who has had a couple spinoff tie-in lines bought exclusively by the dedicated readers of the line (Faction Paradox, Time Hunter), and they all died because no one was buying them.But the episodes exist, are in the can, and at this moment in time, new ones aren't being made. There's a difference between novels referring to television episodes and referring to each other.
It doesn't make sense for Pocket to aim at people in the demographic that is only willing to buy one book every now and then. They would, and do, aim at a wider audience, and thus the quality of the writing and hanging story threads might/does "sell" more titles.
I think I know that's true, intellectually, Christopher. I suppose what's really happening is that I like to feel like I was "there" when a character development or strategic event took place and not just see the fallout ("Batman punched out Guy? And I missed it?! God, I'm depressed.").I guess it's a holdover from watching serialized TV shows. I can't see how anyone could come in cold on BSG, for example, at this stage in the game and get one thousandth of the impact (or make ANY sense) out of it. If I decide to read a novel arc, I always start at the beginning.
But the point is, not all story arcs are anywhere near as serialized as BSG. A series like Titan is more like TNG, where each installment has a self-contained plot and situation and only the characters have developing arcs. You couldn't come in cold on BSG, no, but you could begin watching TNG in, say, the third or fourth season and not be lost.
The "casual" buyer is the wider audience. There's far more people buying a book now and again than dedicated, collecting-all-books fanboys. Or at least there should be. Doctor Who has had a couple spinoff tie-in lines bought exclusively by the dedicated readers of the line (Faction Paradox, Time Hunter), and they all died because no one was buying them.
The "casual" buyer is the wider audience. There's far more people buying a book now and again than dedicated, collecting-all-books fanboys.
I'd be suprised if the people in charge even knew or cared what books were series or which were standalone (and I don't mean just Trek, I'm talking generally here.)
But yeah, it's been a long while since Pocket has done a major marketing push on Star Trek novels to casual buyers. They've tended to rely on excerpts in "Star Trek Magazine" and online resources. I'm expecting that to change in the next few months, plus detecting a building of active interest from bookshop managers hoping to guage the success of the upcoming movie so they have sufficient stock of Trek to meet demand.
Exactly - which is why most novels are written so they can appear to be self-contained, but The Laughing Vulcan seems to be asking for a return to totally self-contained ST novels that reference neither each other, future titles, or episodes, just in case the potential buyers might be shy about buying something that will make them want to buy other books, or DVDs.
Besides, although my personal preferences are otherwise, I am not saying that internovel references will cease, just that the beginning, middle and end of a specific story will have to take place within the confines of one novel, not three, four or ten, as with less cash to spend, casual readers will be less likely to embark on a trilogy instead of take a chance on a single novel.
I was talking to some people the other day who used to read and enjoy Star Trek books but have long since moved on. They're comments boiled down to the fact that they miss novels that are based on events that are set during one of the series--even though the programs have been off the air for years.
They seem to resent the longer story arcs, whether they cross from one series to the next or are multi-book storylines (like Voyager's "String Theory"). They talk about picking up a Star Trek book at the bookstore, seeing the blurb about "After the events in the trilogy Destiny," and just putting the book back down--they don't want to have to be "caught up" on the backstory that has been developed in a series of previous books. And they don't like reading about "new" characters. They want to see the characters as they knew them on screen.
Does anyone else long for the old "numbered" books from years back where we could just enjoy a novel that "could have been" an episode?
I know I do.![]()
And it's a delicte balance anyway. The canon material is there to be enjoyed and the primary focus of Star Trek is its filmed versions so the books must do the things that books do better than film in order to be worth producing IMO.
That means more complexity and more depth.
Words in my mouth much?
Why do you expect it to change?
^ But times have changed. Given the current financial climate I actually doubt that the book chains would be willing to bet too much money on the success of movie-franchise whose numbers have declined with every new film.
^ But times have changed. Given the current financial climate I actually doubt that the book chains would be willing to bet too much money on the success of movie-franchise whose numbers have declined with every new film.
The numbers won't decline with this one.
But why order a ton of stuff for a movie that will be in the public's eye for approximately two months?
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