Meaning, are the new books still mass market paperback size, or are they releasing them as the bigger, trade size books now, like the Discovery books?
Plus they're more expensive. I feel that has something to do with it. Lol
When did this start? Is it just the last two TNG books?
Plus they're more expensive. I feel that has something to do with it. Lol
When did this start? Is it just the last two TNG books?
Some of the Enterprise novels were in that larger format as well. Must have been reprints.
Some of the Enterprise novels were in that larger format as well. Must have been reprints.
Book 1 of The Romulan War was originally released as a trade paperback then later reprinted as an MMPB.Some of the Enterprise novels were in that larger format as well. Must have been reprints.
The first Enterprise Trade Paperback was waay back in 2003 with “The Expanse/The Xindi” novelization. Of course “The Expanse” was originally, as per the copyright page, going to be a hardcover release.Yep. Reprints of some ENT, Vanguard(?) and TNG novels have popped up in my local bookstore in the Print-on-Demand trade format, with wide gutters.
The first "Romulan War" book debuted in trade in 2009 (instead of hardcover), but Book 2 came out in regular MMPB. Of course, "New Frontier" eventually moved to trade PBs instead of hardcovers.
Of course “The Expanse” was originally, as per the copyright page, going to be a hardcover release.
Book 1 of The Romulan War was originally released as a trade paperback then later reprinted as an MMPB.
Yep. When the preview cover (below) was launched at a Shore Leave, the story may have only been planned as a single title, then it was split and given two subtitles, but only the first one came out in trade.
I wish it had been a trilogy. Book 1 was good, but then Book 2 read like a TV script and was very skeletal.As I recall, it was the other way around -- it was originally planned as a trilogy, but when the license came up for renewal, they decided to wrap up any ongoing story arcs just in case it didn't go through, so the plot for books 2-3 was compressed into book 2.
I wish it had been a trilogy. Book 1 was good, but then Book 2 read like a TV script and was very skeletal.
My guess is Michael Martin probably had the story mapped out for a trilogy (at one time I thought I read early on there was a 4 book series planned one for each year of the war but I could be mistaken). But it seemed like they trimmed it back to just two books after the first was already done. So I don't really blame Michael Martin for it. He probably had to trim two books into one and toss out stuff he wanted to do that would have fleshed out the story better.
I wonder what ever happened to Martin. I think he only wrote one more Star Trek book after that and I haven't heard much about him since.
Still annoys me to this day.When the preview cover (below) was launched at a Shore Leave, the story may have only been planned as a single title, then it was split and given two subtitles, but only the first one came out in trade. I was always in a quandary about whether to rebuy the first as the matching MMPB to the duology.
A shame. The books they did together were excellent."The Romulan War" books seemed to create the falling out between Andy Mangels and Michael Martin. I recall Andy expressing surprise that a solo book deal had been negotiated without his participation or knowledge, and Andy couldn't seem get back into the Pocket Books' inner sanctum for new projects of his own.
I think Andy was the talent though. Everything Martin wrote was pretty awful to me. I used to resent my book of the month being a Martin novel when there were so many better writers. All of his solo book contracts should have gone to Bennett or Mack or McCormack, etc.Still annoys me to this day.
A shame. The books they did together were excellent.
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