How will you "grasp" new Trek novels after the new movie comes out?
Since it seems to invalidate a number of elements of the TOS era we knew, it seems to be establishing a tangent universe where certain things are no longer "facts".
If you read a 24th century novel, will you expect it to be an extension of the original timeline, or will you wait and see if the writer throws us a curve and says something that clearly shows Trek XI is being held as valid history?
Also, when you read a TOS era or Kirk-movie-era novel, which timeline will you be assuming it takes place in? Will you go by things like actor's likenesses on the covers? What if it has no such likenesses? What if someone from the movie is on the cover, but something said in the book then clashes with the movie timeline and falls back on the "real" TOS continuity? (Worse, what if the cover features an original TOS actor's face, but in the book things are said that make it plainly a part of the XI timeline?)
Just wondering how the continuity change will affect future novels and your reading of them.
Since it seems to invalidate a number of elements of the TOS era we knew, it seems to be establishing a tangent universe where certain things are no longer "facts".
If you read a 24th century novel, will you expect it to be an extension of the original timeline, or will you wait and see if the writer throws us a curve and says something that clearly shows Trek XI is being held as valid history?
Also, when you read a TOS era or Kirk-movie-era novel, which timeline will you be assuming it takes place in? Will you go by things like actor's likenesses on the covers? What if it has no such likenesses? What if someone from the movie is on the cover, but something said in the book then clashes with the movie timeline and falls back on the "real" TOS continuity? (Worse, what if the cover features an original TOS actor's face, but in the book things are said that make it plainly a part of the XI timeline?)
Just wondering how the continuity change will affect future novels and your reading of them.