Has anybody seen the CD release for sale?
You can say that until the cows come home.
One of the most highly regarded and popular Star Trek books and it never saw another printing. I gave up and got it on Kindle.
It looks like Amazon US has now added their own copies for sale since you posted. I don't know if they ship worldwide, but they do ship to Canada.
Only downside is they're $39.99, versus the $25.99 for the Blackstone listing.
That’s really kind of lovely, imagining him in his quarters, pacing around dictating as he tries to let the day’s events wash away and process his thoughts. Or maybe as he’s lone in his shop stitching, as it were. Or on Cardassia after the fall, just trying to keep it together, writing to Bashir.Given how most characters in Trek seem to "write" by dictating to a computer rather than actually writing things down (a conceit for the benefit of the television/film format), I've often figured that A Stitch in Time is probably a transcription of a memoir that Garak dictated aloud. So an unabridged audiobook version performed by Robinson might be considered the more genuine article.
Omg the extract is soooo nostalgic
https://www.audible.co.uk/pd/A-Stitch-in-Time-Audiobook/B0C8WGLRPQ?
Robinson's voice!
I joined Audible to get it - so happy. I love his Odo, it's such a lovely version of him
Now can @Una McCormack get Robinson to read The Never-Ending Sacrifice? Or her other books? It'd be wonderful!
The Romulan Way
A Burning House is a cool book
Actors have done a number of half-assed audiobooks in the past (Doohan, Takei, Frakes, others) that you can find low quality rips of on YouTube, but they’re all like 2 hours long. If I’m going to listen to an audiobook it has has has to be unabridged
It certainly would be interesting to hear the (attempted) pronunciation of those Rihannsu names!![]()
Spock’s World
For my mileage, a 90-minute audio production, with or without a writer’s modest consent (what are they going to do, not take the money), is a half-assed audiobook, regardless whether or not they get the entire cast back for it. “Audio production” is to audiobook as processed cheese food product is to cheese. I want the full, unabridged and uncensored, whole story from start to finish. To lose myself in it as it was meant to be. The actors voices themselves are somewhat just a gimmick if the story itself isn’t all there. I don’t want a Trek “experience,” I want Trek.Certainly not half-assed, especially the first few years "with Leonard Nimoy as the voice of Spock". Even though some of these audio productions were only 90 or 180 mins each, they had newly-composed music and were usually abridged for audio with the involvement of the novelists themselves (and later by George Truett). The Spock sections were reconceived for audio as Science Officer's Logs, a clever device to summarise sequences to fit the whole story onto one or two audiocassettes.
They were not the books. They were entertaining productions featuring known Trek actors.
These were in the days when unabridged audio books were really only made for the Vision-Impaired Community. The Simon & Schuster Audioworks were commercially viable, on one, two or four cassettes, and several won awards for their innovations. Furthermore, the three "Captain Sulu Adventures" were exclusively written for "3D" audio, at 70min duration each.
I once emailed Duane Duane for her comments on the colour and style of Harb Tanzer's mustach. She answered! (It was for a custom action figure, and I read that she had complained about his hair colour in the DC comic.
"Spock's World" did get a 1989 abridgement in audio, at 180 min. (Nimoy and Takei.)
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