Bandit LOAF said:
Hmmm, I'm not entirely sure what you mean - can you think of a specific issue? Action Stations is the events from Tolwyn and company's perspective, Claw Marks is more how you would see it on a global (galactic, I guess) scale. Action Stations incorporates all the individual facts from the entry and then expands them in various dramatic ways (involving Tolwyn, making ".235" the Space 4th of July, etc.) If you focus on the chapter that mentions Ches M. Penney, that gives you a good idea of how it's based on but from a different perspetive as the Claw Marks blurb.
Sure. Apologies for the belated reply though, I thought I'd refresh my memory of
Action Stations by starting a complete read through of it today. As you say, the time line entries in
Claw Marks,
Victory Streak, etc are describing the events from a "big picture" perspective rather than the individual exposition of events unfolding around the various characters in AS.
Having just finished AS again, I still seem to read at least one notable deviation from the big picture situation during the "McAuliffe Ambush" as revealed in AS and as outlined in the time line. I'll go through the minor one (2634.228) first. Admittedly, I don't have so much of a problem with there being any deviation between AS and the time line entry here, rather the way it is handled in AS. The scant portion (chapter 10, pp 209-213) in AS that mentions Penney decoding the cypher and Banbridge's consequent bolstering of Confed forces in McAuliffe by directing Ark Royal and her escorts there, is fine. Similarly, I'll take Banbridge's stated belief that Confed should outnumber the Kilrathi in 'battlewagons' by more than 2 to 1 based on the information he had, as fulfilling the "counter-offensive twice the size of the anticipated [Kilrathi] fleet" line.
However, my impression of this sequence is that it was rather clumsily inserted for compliance with the established time line rather than integrated in to the rest of the story. Sure, there's the Speedwell thread running through the book about Confed Intel not having much luck gathering signal intelligence and losing a bunch of intel teams (cue repetitive iron curtain analogies) which provides scope and motive for Turner's op and the whole Mos Eisley thing at Gar's, but I felt the cypher aspect (and not just for the Penney reference) could have been woven in much more effectively. Apart from a couple of issues I've got with the writing, I did quite enjoy the fleshing out of the frontier in this time period, particularly the little bit of privateering and Gar's Emporium. A little less of the Landreich in favour of another bordering frontier region would have been preferred, but I can see why Forstchen included it. This section is a key focus of the book building up to the "McAuliffe Ambush" itself and the aftermath, but both suggest to me that Forstchen was driven by a very specific story that he wanted to tell, i.e. bringing most of the
Fleet Action characters back full-circle in the lead up to 'Pearl Harbour-in-space' and the established time line was accommodated around that, c.f. shoehorning the Penney reference in as a minor supporting comment after Turner and co had already got the evidence.
Anyway, these criticisms are probably better suited to a different thread, but I'd thought I'd mention them as they influenced my perception of the gist of
Action Stations, which to me does differ slightly in general from the basic outline in the various time lines, while quite considerably in one instance, if the deviation below can not be resolved.
So, here's the main deviation appearing in the second time line entry (2634.235), which I can't resolve. The offending sentence ("After a tense rush to McAullife, the Confederation fleet establishes a formidable defensive position around the planet.") appears in
Victory Streak, and the
Kilrathi Saga Manual, but not in
Claw Marks or
Voices of War and clearly doesn't happen in
Action Stations. Yes, once fully operational, Seventh Fleet is apparently a formidable force -- even with the emphasised vintage of various craft, cutbacks, etc -- and together with the base defences, marine contingent and shield system would make McAuliffe a very tough nut even if outnumbered and with shield-busting torpedoes, however they're simply not in that (disadvantaged, but reasonably prepared) position when the hammer falls, as that particular line in
Victory Streak suggests. Through repeated lapses, the priority courier message from Banbridge doesn't reach Admirals Long or Nagumo in time, while the burst transmission from HQ came in too late and they were pretty much caught on the hop rather than having "established a formidable defensive position around the planet" which strongly implies a completely different situation, i.e. a co-ordinated defence, knowing of and prepared for the imminent incoming attack, even if outnumbered. Since that line only appears in
Victory Streak and the derivative
Kilrathi Saga Manual, perhaps it was a slip that wasn't part of the guidance/bible that Fortschen used?
It's understandable if that specific sentence mentioned above in the timeline was a slip up, but if not I'd be interested to hear how it could be explained?