Endless Myth and Star Trek Novels, Comics, and Audio Dramas
— Expanding Beyond Television into Infinite Parallel Universes and Cosmic Mythology —
The novel Endless Myth and the expanded universe of Star Trek novels, comics, and audio dramas share a major similarity:
they both expand far beyond the limits of a single visual narrative medium.
Television and film always face restrictions:
Budget
Runtime
Audience expectations
Production limitations
But Star Trek evolved beyond those boundaries through:
Novels
Comics
Audio dramas
Expanded-universe stories
As a result, the franchise began exploring ideas impossible to fully realize on television alone:
Parallel worlds
Alternate timelines
“What if?” universes
The origins of cosmic entities like the Q Continuum
1. Star Trek Became More Than Television
Star Trek began as a television series.
Over time, however, it transformed into a massive multimedia universe that extended across:
Novels
Comic series
Audio productions
Games
Semi-independent side stories
These works created versions of the Star Trek universe that television alone could never fully contain.
2. Shared Themes with Endless Myth: Expanding Cosmic Structure
In Endless Myth, the universe endlessly multiplies through omniversal branching.
The expanded Star Trek universe also refuses to remain limited to a single continuity.
Stories explored:
Alternate timelines
Fallen Federations
Different historical outcomes
Worlds where Kirk made different choices
In other words, Star Trek gradually mass-produced “possible universes.”
3. The Explosion of Parallel Worlds
The novels and comics allowed far greater creative freedom than television.
As a result, countless realities emerged:
Mirror universes
Altered futures
Timeline-collapse scenarios
Completely destroyed civilizations
This increasingly resembled later multiverse storytelling.
4. The Origins of the Q Continuum
Q and the Q Continuum were already unusual within the television series itself.
However, expanded-universe works explored them even further, including:
The origins of the Q Continuum
Evolution of godlike beings
Civilizations beyond time itself
Entities existing before the birth of the universe
At this point, Star Trek moved beyond exploration-based science fiction and closer to cosmic mythology.
5. Freedom Beyond Television
Visual productions always face practical limitations:
Budget constraints
Broadcasting restrictions
Continuity management
Audience accessibility
Novels and comics dramatically reduced those restrictions.
This allowed Star Trek to embrace more extreme forms of science fiction.
6. Comparison with Endless Myth: Making Structure the Narrative
Endless Myth does not remain confined to one world or one timeline.
Its focus expands toward:
Multiverses
Omniverses
Infinite histories
Godlike cosmic entities
The structure of existence itself becomes the story.
Similarly, expanded Star Trek media gradually evolved from episodic television science fiction into a massive structure of infinite possible universes.
Conclusion: Star Trek Became an Endless Universe
Endless Myth and the expanded Star Trek universe both function as endless narrative systems:
Endless Myth: an infinitely branching omniverse
Star Trek: an endlessly expanding science-fiction multiverse
Novels, comics, and audio dramas allowed Star Trek to explore freedoms impossible within television alone.
As a result, the franchise transformed into something far larger than a TV series:
Infinite possibilities
Alternate universes
Cosmic entities
Endless “what if?” histories
This comparison leads to a larger question:
What is true canon?
Only what appears on screen—
or the entire infinite structure of possibilities surrounding it?






