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Interlinked novels set after the episode "Endgame". Homecoming (2003) [2] and The Farther Shore (2003), by Christie Golden, detail the aftermath of Voyager 's surprise return to Earth. From 2004 to 2009, characters from Voyager appeared in other Star Trek relaunch novels, as well as the Star Trek: Titan flagship series.
Star Trek: Enterprise book line is based on the television series of the same name. Originally published as Enterprise, without the Star Trek prefix. The book line was relaunched with the publication of Last Full Measure (2006), by Andy Mangels and Michael A. Martin. Numbering of the novels varies by language and market.
Star Trek: Section 31 is a series of thematically linked novels that explore the operations of the clandestine organization known as Section 31. The series was published by Pocket Books from 2001 to 2017, and initially spanned four Star Trek book lines , including The Next Generation , Deep Space Nine , and Voyager .
Star Trek: Voyager was the first Star Trek series to use computer-generated imagery (CGI), rather than models, for exterior space shots. [4] Babylon 5 and seaQuest DSV had previously used CGI to avoid the expense of models, but the Star Trek television department continued using models because they felt they were more realistic.
(Some books published after the end of the series, but before the official relaunch stories began, have been retroactively added to the relaunch, including the anthology The Lives of Dax and the novel A Stitch in Time. The Star Trek: Voyager relaunch series, written by Christie Golden, is set after the end of the Voyager series.
List of original audiobooks, gamebooks, parodies, photo comics, and picture books based on Star Trek and its spin-offs, as well as fictional references, manuals, and biographies written from an in-universe perspective, and other tie-in fiction works.
Jeri Taylor was the executive producer of Star Trek: Voyager for the first five seasons, and thereafter acted as a creative consultant until the end of the season. She had co-created the show alongside Michael Piller, and stated that Captain Kathryn Janeway was her most significant character, saying that "There is so much of me in her that in the beginning it bothered me to share her with Kate ...
Paramount moved the film's release from December 2008 to May 2009, as the studio felt more people would see the film during summer than winter. The film was practically finished by the end of 2008, [1] and this allowed Foster to watch the whole film before writing the novelization, although the novel contains scenes absent from the film's final ...