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b5_revisited2012-07-22 06:00 pm
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Legions of Fire, Book I: The Long Night of Centauri Prime - Chapters 6-13
This is the discussion post for chapters 6-13 of Peter David's Legions of Fire, Book I: The Long Night of Centauri Prime. Spoilers for the whole of the series, including the spin-offs and tie-ins, are allowed here so newbies beware.
Next week, we'll discuss the rest of the book (Part II, chapters 14-22).
MOD NOTE: Since I'll be on my summer vacation for the next few weeks, I've set the posts to appear on schedule but probably won't monitoring the comm very actively, so if the discussion posts fail to appear on Sundays or there some other problems, please send me a PM.
P.S.
babylon5_love could use some more contribuors.
Next week, we'll discuss the rest of the book (Part II, chapters 14-22).
MOD NOTE: Since I'll be on my summer vacation for the next few weeks, I've set the posts to appear on schedule but probably won't monitoring the comm very actively, so if the discussion posts fail to appear on Sundays or there some other problems, please send me a PM.
P.S.
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I had always wondered about the idea of David Sheridan getting a Keeper instead of John or Delenn. As you said, neither Alliance nor Anla'Shok are hereditary, all you'd be doing is ruining the personal lives of the Sheridan family, and if that's your goal why wait so long? Ever since reading your rather excellent summary of how you'd handle a Legions of Fire rewrite I've been wondering about how Keepers are supposed to work. In my own Trilogy re-write, I had them extremely limited to one at a time, two maximum, but your idea of having hundreds in order to have an aura of paranoia works very well too. So which one is it, and why don't the Drakh try to get Keepers on Sheridan and Delenn in addition to David? Is it meant to be insurance? If so, against what? And again, why wait so long to put that insurance in place? Furthermore, this ties into one of my biggest issues with Season 5, namely that after discovering the existence of Keepers with Captain Jack on Mars, the issue is never brought up again and treated as a dead end. Excuse me, but if I found out that there's an unknown enemy that could place a parasite on key influential people in order to control their actions you can bet your ass my first order of business would be to find a way to detect these things in advance and have every key authority figure tested regularly to make sure they're clean! Ah well, it's just one more problem with the whole "15 years" issue, I suppose.
As for the Technomages, I enjoyed their role in Geometry of Shadows, even if it did seem like a strange fantasy element to place in a sci-fi show. I've heard them referred to humorously as intergalactic LARPers (live-action role players) which seemed fitting. Still, it gave us some of Londo and Vir's best scenes so I don't complain.
But the thing about mysterious entities is that they're at their best when they remain mysterious. And the best way to do that is use them sparingly. Using them in such numbers in the Trilogy opens all sorts of plot holes, and as much as I can believe that they know about Vir because of their dealings with him, I have trouble believing that Vir would ever work with them. Of all the people on the show, one would think that *Vir* would know "that some favors come with too high a price." and would reject such help on principal, instead turning to trustworthy allies like the rest of the B5 cast, who we've seen him interact with over the course of 5 years, for help. And yes, their smug superiority is bloody infuriating, in particular when it comes to the Mariel situation which I will not go into detail on until we get to that point. Goddamn Technomages, stay out of my Centauri storylines!
Yes, the Londo and Vir dialogue was quite good, and when I first read it it gave me immense hopes for the rest of the trilogy (hopes that were rather dashed when Vir fell out of character and stayed there for the remaining books).
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Sorry my responses are a bit all of the place, but I did get really excited when you said that Sejanus would have been a much better parallel for Durla, as in my own Trilogy rewrite fanfic I've made a very big point that my re-imagination of Durla is based on Sejanus. I also rewrote the Drakh effect on Centauri Prime to more closely resemble the Roman proscriptions under Sulla or Tiberius, ie that any nobles that came too close to finding out the Drakh secret suddenly find themselves up on treason charges, and in this version Durla is the one who manages the fallout in order to better hide their existence and also uses the opportunity to kill off some of his own personal enemies. Bah, but I'm rambling, this is not the place for fanfic discussion. Still, what a terrible shame that Peter David didn't take the time to make Drakh transformation of Centauri Prime resemble something other than a very poor and transparent Fascist parallel. There were so many other points in history that would have been more fitting with the Centauri national character, and which are not quite so overused.
As I've said before, the Centauri Hitler Youth made me scream with frustration when I first encountered them, and my poor bf can attest to the many hours I spent chewing off his ear over this outrage. As if the Lords and Ladies of Centauri society would allow their children to join such an organization! As if the Centauri themselves would have any interest in a Fascist society, becoming faceless soldiers in service of another man's glory, be it the Emperor or Durla, men who in their eyes are hardly worthy of playing secretary to some of the great Houses, let alone serving as Emperor.
*Sigh* Sorry, this post has gotten away from me. Honestly the opening of Book 1 isn't that bad. I am loving the discussion too, thank you for organizing this read-through, Ruuger!
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So in the shock of having lived through the mass driver attack, I could see a grass root mass movement (how about a tea party? Okay, that's just mean) starting. But you know, definitely not by the surviving artistocracy, which brings us back of David not featuring any Centauri commoners. Also, it would go directly against the Drakh interest, because the thing about revolutions is that they upset any structures of command for a considerable time before resettling into new ones, and the Drakh are depending on the chain of command from the Emperor downwards to be intact. This includes the rise of a successful fascist party. Presumably David skipped the part of post WWI, pre WWII German history where there were street battles between Nazis and Communists, failed coup attempts and generally a lot of anarchy. It wasn't something that came from above, though Hitler of course later, once he was a significant factor, acquired backers in the industry and some allies among aristocrats like von Papen who thought they could use him and ended up being used by him instead.
Incidentally, if we do go for a revolution on Centauri Prime, overturning the old power structures, the human model I'd follow would be the French Revolution. Which means once the dust was settled there would be a new Emperor and a new aristocracy (with some leftovers from the old, but mainly New People), and some better laws for the population en masse, while if CP is unlucky the new Emperor would also be into conquering other worlds, but the Centauri flamboyance and individual need to show off florishing as much as ever.... and again, something like the French Revolution contains far too much anarchy and quick turnover rates of important power players to be compatible with what's supposed to be the secret assimilation of a planet by aliens.
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Which actually reminds me of one question I've always had - how much do normal Centauri know about the events of Cartagia's reign, the Vorlon attack, the deals with the Shadows, etc.? In my headcanon I assume Vir brought it all to light during his reign. However, from an outsider perspective, Cartagia's reign would be a golden age characterized by the return of Centauri glory. After all, the Emperor would get credit for Londo's accomplishments back on homeworld, and all of those were during Cartagia's reign. The first thing that happened after Cartagia was Londo ceding the Narn back their planet, which was necessary but from a popular point of view might appear to be weak.
Anyway, yes, I imagine the Centauri would freak the heck out over being bombed, having not experienced what they had been dealing out to others for centuries. In that the US parallel is quite apt. And I understand how the Drakh would hope to take advantage of that to further isolate the Centauri and cut them off from former allies, which also worked well in the US. What I don't understand is how they planned to sustain that hatred for so many years without some form of action? Were the Centauri supposed to just seethe against the Alliance for decades without any catharsis? And if revolution was required, as you say since it makes total sense that normal Centauri would get annoyed by Londo's class at some point (despite the racial obsession with status). However, such upheaval would probably not be in the Drakh's best interest. Honestly I think again its just lazy, American-centric writing. Americans (and I speak as one of them) make a national hobby of over-simplifying Fascism and the circumstances that gave rise to it. If I see one more lazy Nazi-parallel bad guy in any medium it will be too soon. The thing is, I don't mind Fascists-as-bad-guys, or Nazi-parallel bad guys when its done effectively and with a mind for what really happened. NightWatch was a well done example of this, the Prime Candidates were not.
A French Revolution style upheaval would be very convincing for Centauri culture to be honest, and something that would be very interesting to see. One can't help but wonder how alone Urza Jaddo was in his Narn sympathies, one would assume there must be factions of Centauri who outright opposed the war. The Centauri Trilogy would have been an excellent place to mention them, pity it never did.
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I think there were; my headcanon, which I believe I used for some stories like "Lost in Translation", is that Turhan as a younger man became the focus point of the peace party, much as Cartagia a generation (or two!) later became the "candidate", so to speak, of the war party. That's assuming that the Centauri occupation of Narn went on for a century or so, and by the end there must have been anti war attitude both for utterly pragmatic reasons (Narn was costing far more than it was bringing in, in terms of money and manpower) and for moral reasons (note that Urza was a former war hero, btw). So Turhan, backed up by a sizaable contingent in the Centaurum, orders the first withdrawal from Narn. (This is also why House Mollari loses seriously in influence, because Londo's grandfather was a hardcore Narn occupier and warmongerer.) But then as the Narn turn into an up and coming power and start to not just to compete with but to best the Centauri, you get the "we could have kept that planet if only those peaceniks hadn't stabbed us in the back, and look how humiliated we are now!" propaganda starting, and by the end of Turhan's reign, Turhan and Malachi and their reconciliation policy are very much a minority opinion, and they're seen as failures.
re: your question how Cartagia's regime would have been seen - I'm tempted to go with the Caligula and Nero receptions, of course, i.e. people would assume Cartagia got off to a great start and renewal after his uncle's age of decline, and then went bonkers. (If they're rumours about Cartagia's craziness at the Royal Court, they must have been among the population as well. Plus the Shadows openly arrived on Centauri Prime, and I can't imagine any Centauri glad about having those creepy ships around. If humans went crazy touching them, it must have happened to Centauri as well. I'M taking Londo at his word that the people remaining on Celini to trick the Shadows volunteered, and for this to happen, my guess is at that point the general opinion, carefully expressed only in private, was "the Emperor went mad, these creepy aliens probably had something to do with it, have you heard what happened to cousin X who, etc., and by the way, my uncle says critisizing the Emperor's hair cut is now punishable by death".
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Hmm, now there's a fun idea for the direction Centauri facism/popular unrest could go in - revolts led by Pseudo-Cartagia figures. If nothing else, the suspicious nature of his death would certainly have led to conspiracy theories, and if he was popular, the idea that he wasn't really dead might flourish for a long time...
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As I said, I think that's the result of JMS applying a fantasy concept to what's not a fantasy type of story. I mean, I can completely believe the Drakh feeling particularly vengeful towards John and Delenn. (If they're pissed off at Londo for bombing the Shadows on Celini, how must they feel about Sheridan and the nuke on Z'ha'dum? And then Lyta blows up Z'ha'dum, which was her idea, but the Drakh probably think she acted on Sheridan's orders.) So I can even buy them feeling the wish to destroy their personal future in the form of their child (in addition to plotting against humanity in totem, which happens pre-Crusade). However, what I'm struggling with is the idea they would do the David thing instead of, as opposed to in addition to, going after John and/or Delenn themselves, because if you're the Drakh and want to Drakhify the verse long term, and you do have the opportunity to get a Keeper next to two of the most powerful people on the current galactic scene, you go for that.
Unless we want to be unkind and say that Sheridan did such a bad job as President in the first year that the Drakh thought, as they do about Durla in (Peter) David's book: we don't need a Keeper on this guy, he does everything we want him to do anyway!
But the thing about mysterious entities is that they're at their best when they remain mysterious. And the best way to do that is use them sparingly.
I agree, but in David's defense, that particular cat was already out of the bag. Crusade by featuring a Technomage regular in the cast, two episodes featuring other Technomages as guest stars and a storyline building up to the Technomages-were-originally-created-by-Shadows revelation had made the Technomages mainstream, so to speak.
Vir agreeing to work with them is for the next section of the book, but I'm so with you on this subject.