@JonnyQuest037 Thank you for the overview of the different writing styles on comics, that's great stuff. And also for your perspective on the rise and fall and rise of the quality of writing for the overall series. I did like Mike W. Barr's work (and he came up with some good stuff on the original Marvel Star Wars comics back in the 80s that I liked), although I go the other way.
Thanks! I went to the Kubert School back in the '90s and I write for
BACK ISSUE magazine from TwoMorrows Publishing today, so I've learned quite a bit about comic book production along the way.
That sequence of adventures started off with the endlessly re-printed Mirror Universe Saga, which was a strong start, and Diane Duane contributed a couple of stories over three issues of excellent quality.
Yeah. MWB wrote in
his retrospective of Star Trek comics in BACK ISSUE #5 that he was supposed to be leaving the series only temporarily after the Mirror Universe Saga, but he got sidetracked with other projects at DC, namely writing both the newsstand version of
Batman and the Outsiders and the direct sales only
The Outsiders, and then his all-too-brief run on
Detective Comics with artist Alan Davis. By the time Barr had time in his schedule again to write more Trek, the editorship of the
Star Trek books had changed.
It's too bad Barr didn't get a chance to play around with the new status quo he set up between STIII and IV with Kirk's crew on the
Excelsior and Spock commanding a new crew on the
Surak. It would've been fun to see what he would've done with it. And let's not forget that MWB had a Klingon serving on Kirk's
Enterprise years before TNG came along!
After Barr's departure, there were some good individual issues (I really like Len Wein's 20th anniversary story where the TOS era crew met their future counterparts from the movie era, Diane Duane did some good stories, and it was always a treat to see Dan Spiegle or Gray Morrow draw
Trek), but when you don't have a regular creative team in comics, a book will almost inevitably flounder. You can't really do any long-running subplots or plot developments when someone else is going to be writing the book in another issue or two. And the first DC run probably did a few too many follow ups to TOS episodes in the post TWOK era, with sequels to "The Apple," "Wolf in the Fold," the Mirror Universe Saga, and another return of Harry Mudd, all in the space of a few years.
I agree with JonnyQuest037's assessment. Mike's initial run on the series was my favorite.
Wow, I'm a bit surprised to hear that. I wouldn't have thought that Mike's
Trek stuff would be up your alley, since you tend to go for a harder SF approach to Trek than he does. But then again, you two did both work on that
Mere Anarchy e-book series with several other Trek authors. (Which, BTW, I remember quite enjoying, even though I haven't read it since 2009.)
Isabella was going to become the new regular writer, but he had to drop out after one issue and was replaced by Len Wein
Wow, I either haven't heard this before or I'd forgotten. Do you know why Tony left the book?
(I can't remember if that happened, my overall impression of Bearclaw is that he was consistently exasperating).
Yeah, basically they fell into a rut with Bearclaw, where he typically did something hotheaded or disobeyed orders practically every story. It got old pretty fast. Peter David did some decent work redeeming Bearclaw in the last chunk of issues he wrote.