I first read Web of the Romulans a few years ago, and I've just started reading it again. I'd rank it in my top 15 or so favorite Trek novels. I think it does a great job of evoking the original series.
I was surprised to learn from Voyages of Imagination that before WotR, apparently she had only ever written a fanzine short story, from which the novel derived. Upon hearing that Pocket was accepting unsolicited submissions for Trek novels, she thought her short story would make a good novel, and in six weeks wrote the entire manuscript of the novel and sent it off. It bounced around the Pocket offices for a few years. Then an editor called and asked her to expand the novel, since by then Pocket was publishing larger Trek novels. She did, and it was published with no further requested changes (other than the title -- her original title was We Who Are About to Die).
I just think it's so cool that a totally inexperienced writer was able to sit down and bang out a publishable novel (and in my opinion, a rather good one). I'm much more accustomed to hearing from writers that they've been writing fiction since they were nine, and that they've accumulated a stack of unpublished novels and a dumpster's worth of rejection slips before making their first sale. So is this unusual among writers (not just Trek writers but fiction writers in general), or does this happen more often than I think it does? (And no, I'm not asking because I think it could happen to me. I love fiction but I can't write it. I'm perfectly content to let the professionals do it, so I can enjoy the result.
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I was surprised to learn from Voyages of Imagination that before WotR, apparently she had only ever written a fanzine short story, from which the novel derived. Upon hearing that Pocket was accepting unsolicited submissions for Trek novels, she thought her short story would make a good novel, and in six weeks wrote the entire manuscript of the novel and sent it off. It bounced around the Pocket offices for a few years. Then an editor called and asked her to expand the novel, since by then Pocket was publishing larger Trek novels. She did, and it was published with no further requested changes (other than the title -- her original title was We Who Are About to Die).
I just think it's so cool that a totally inexperienced writer was able to sit down and bang out a publishable novel (and in my opinion, a rather good one). I'm much more accustomed to hearing from writers that they've been writing fiction since they were nine, and that they've accumulated a stack of unpublished novels and a dumpster's worth of rejection slips before making their first sale. So is this unusual among writers (not just Trek writers but fiction writers in general), or does this happen more often than I think it does? (And no, I'm not asking because I think it could happen to me. I love fiction but I can't write it. I'm perfectly content to let the professionals do it, so I can enjoy the result.
