Maybe we might get DS9: A Celebration and TNG: A Celebration.
"Many have asked me to write about my adventures with Book prior to when we first encountered Michael Burnham, and there are many fine and exciting adventures to tell. But I'm aware you readers tend to look down on anything in written form as being 'non-canon' and only view what you see on screen as what truly counts, so fine. I will degrade myself by telling a story you'll only ignore anyway. So, when Burnham and the crew of USS Discovery entered my service..."I wonder whether Grudge's book contains any new tidbits, like her past or visit to other planets, or just retells the eps closely.
Lolcats are so mid-2000s. The new hotness is cats speaking like perpetually offended 19th-century French children. "Jail for Michael! Jail for Michael for One Thousand Years!"Please don't be written in I can haz cheeseburger cat meme-speak.
Please.
(was there's 50th ann book? I can't remember)
yes and there was the Altman/Gross 50 year Mission volumes.Not from Eaglemoss, but there was a 50th anniversary edition of "Boarding the Enterprise" (with new intros by David Gerrold and Robert J Sawyer), an anniversary issue for "Star Trek Magazine", "The Star Trek Book: Strange New Worlds Boldly Explained" hardcover, plus the "50 Artists, 50 Years" art book and calendar. Lots of Trek books carried a 50th logo that year.
I was mostly pleased with Voyager: A Celebration, and would love to see these. Heck, I know it's not very popular around here, but I'd be down for Enterprise: A Celebration.Maybe we might get DS9: A Celebration and TNG: A Celebration.
Not from Eaglemoss, but there was a 50th anniversary edition of "Boarding the Enterprise" (with new intros by David Gerrold and Robert J Sawyer), an anniversary issue for "Star Trek Magazine", "The Star Trek Book: Strange New Worlds Boldly Explained" hardcover, plus the "50 Artists, 50 Years" art book and calendar. Lots of Trek books carried a 50th logo that year.
And on the fiction front we got the movie era e-book novella Miasma by Greg Cox, and the TV era novel trilogy Legacies, which was made up of Captain to Captain by Greg Cox, Best Defense by David Mack, and Purgatory's Key by Dayton Ward, and The Face of The Unknown by Christopher L. Bennett.yes and there was the Altman/Gross 50 year Mission volumes.
i was also thinking back to the 25th anniversary and thinking there was an abundance of 'coffee table' books like Where One One Has Gone Before (JM Dillard) and The Art of Trek and the Encyclopedia/Chorology but then remembered they came out after around the time of Generations .. i remember there was supposed to be a special 25th coffee table book from Gene Roddenberry that was advertised in various magazines like starlog and The Official Fan Club mag etc but that it got cancelled and i think i read somewhere it was due to Leonard Nimoy not agreed to sign off on it.. so the only 25th anniversary book i recall was the silver covered Starlog special which was like a photo album and a very big deal to me at the time
edit: yes its on MA https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wik...reference_books#Star_Trek:_The_First_25_Years
Somewhere in a closet I've got an advance galley of that book, which I reviewed for Library Journal, but the book was cancelled, so the review never ran, but I got to keep the galley. I gave it a lukewarm review, as it wasn't great. It was written in the same format as The Making of Star Trek, with Roddenberry inserting interstitial bits, but the bulk of the book written by his collaborator, in this case Susan Sackett.i remember there was supposed to be a special 25th coffee table book from Gene Roddenberry that was advertised in various magazines like starlog and The Official Fan Club mag etc but that it got cancelled and i think i read somewhere it was due to Leonard Nimoy not agreed to sign off on it.. so the only 25th anniversary book i recall was the silver covered Starlog special which was like a photo album and a very big deal to me at the time
edit: yes its on MA https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wik...reference_books#Star_Trek:_The_First_25_Years
I'm curious which sell better. Pocket was all about floating heads for a couple of years, then they switched to mostly CG space ship scenes (or at least that's how it seemed). Now they're doing more of a mix with some more poster art-type stuff too.
We all know that the best selling covers are those with gorillas, questions in text and the colour purple.
I want that book NOW!!!So we need purple covers with inquisitive Mugatos?
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