What do you think? Are there other common issues among the books that can be considered canon?
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This is how i prefer the borg... in pieces!!! -- Janeway in Dark Frontier
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love's function is to fabricate unknownnness
--
E. E. Cummings
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Read chapter one of "Dirk Tungsten in...The Disappearing Planet"! And party everyday.
Canon can be very personal. Star Trek is what you make of it. If you want to consider things canon, go right ahead, we're not (all) canon-nazi's here
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"Human race in tha house!" KoRn & Kittie, This Town
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"Second star to the right, and then straight on till morning."
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Ready for the action now, Dangerboy
Ready if I'm ready for you, Dangerboy
Ready if I want it now, Dangerboy?
How dare you, dare you, Dangerboy?
How dare you, Dangerboy?
I dare you, dare you, Dangerboy...
�on Flux, "Thanatophobia"
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"My Name is Elmer Fudd, Millionaire. I own a Mansion and a Yacht."
Psychiatrist: "Again."
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"It's like the Star of David or something. But without the whole Judaism thing."
-Frank Gerratana, 17-Aug-2000
Sorry, couldn't resist.
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"Ed Gruberman, you fail to grasp Ty Kwan Leap. Approach me, that you might see." -- The Master
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"I know ... these things will kill me," Grayson said, extinguishing his cigarette as Duncan MacLeod approached.
Actually, the episode where Janeway "dies" and meets her father was especially made to reinforce her backstory as told in "Mosaic" and "Pathways." However, other parts of those books were contradictory to later episodes, so again its semi-canon nature comes under debate.
In my opinion as a ST novel reader, there are several books out there which are astoundingly good in subject matter and detail. Unfortunately, with the amount of these books churning out of the publishing companies every month, and the fact that Star Trek episodes are still being made, they all tend to start contradicting themselves more and more when viewed as a whole. With the authors using Okuda's encyclopedia and chronology more, the books are at least becoming more consistent, but I doubt there will ever be a truly "canon" novel that won't contradict anything that came before or after it.
(Even the novelizations of the movies and occasional episodes aren't 100% true to their viewed versions; sometimes authors tend to add new things or change others to suit their personal writing.)
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Bart: "Hey, Dad, I'll trade you this delicious doorstop for that crummy old danish."
Homer: "Done and done...D'oh!"
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"Incest! A game the whole family can play!"
-Jonah Rapp
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Ready for the action now, Dangerboy
Ready if I'm ready for you, Dangerboy
Ready if I want it now, Dangerboy?
How dare you, dare you, Dangerboy?
How dare you, Dangerboy?
I dare you, dare you, Dangerboy...
�on Flux, "Thanatophobia"