Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q7600992> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 29 of
29
with 100 triples per page.
- Q7600992 subject Q7725047.
- Q7600992 abstract "Star Trek: Section 31 is a series of novels that revolve around the shadow organization known as Section 31. Each novel takes place in a different series as Star Trek: The Original Series, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Star Trek: Voyager.In Voyages of Imagination, Pocket Books editor Marco Palmieri remarked on Star Trek: 31: "From the moment the concept was introduced in the Deep Space Nine episode 'Inquisition,' I knew I wanted to do Section 31 stories. Here was a secret, autonomous black ops agency, willing to take whatever action was needed for the safety and security of the Federation, and the elimination of all threats to it. The controversy that eruped in fandom over Section 31 didn't surprise me; in fact, it only fueled my desire. Some fans argue that it goes against the fundamental ideology and the basic philosophical assumptions that Star Trek is built upon. Others say it adds texture and greater complexity to the Star Trek universe by retroactively introducing the idea of a necessary evil. What I realized is that this very argument is what's so compelling about the concept in terms of storytelling. These were the kinds of questions the familiar heroes of Star Trek would wrestle with in the novels, because Section 31 is an enemy their training doesn't prepare them for."On the format of the series, Palmieri states "The reason I wanted to do Section 31 as four novels was in part to explore the organization's effects upon different crews beyond the DS9 milieu, and in part because I thought too many of our miniseries in those days were multipart stories, where the reader would have to sometimes read four, six, or more volumes in order to get a complete story. By contrast, Section 31 is four standalone novels. No connecting story, no numbers on the books to denote a reading order, just the unifying theme. The idea was to give the reader the option to read as many or as few of the Section 31 novels as he or she wanted, in any order. I think readers appreciated that approach; the Section 31 novels ended up being the top-selling mass-market Star Trek titles that year."".
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q1077.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q108774.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q1092.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q1110.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q1181143.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q1412961.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q15432632.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q156329.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q16290.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q16968662.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q220652.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q252896.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q2914721.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q3018973.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q380519.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q446973.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q4670734.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q4760985.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q5134744.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q6036887.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q7206385.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q7437235.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q7460439.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q7725047.
- Q7600992 wikiPageWikiLink Q7942480.
- Q7600992 comment "Star Trek: Section 31 is a series of novels that revolve around the shadow organization known as Section 31. Each novel takes place in a different series as Star Trek: The Original Series, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Star Trek: Voyager.In Voyages of Imagination, Pocket Books editor Marco Palmieri remarked on Star Trek: 31: "From the moment the concept was introduced in the Deep Space Nine episode 'Inquisition,' I knew I wanted to do Section 31 stories.".
- Q7600992 label "Star Trek: Section 31".