Did some become official fanon if nothing else?
What the what now? "Official Fanon" seems like an oxymoron. Who would be declaring which fannish concept ("fanon") is "official"?
Blish was influential in
Star Trek fandom. In the days before the VCR (or even the Fotonovels) his books were
THE handy reference fans could turn to when they wanted to research a point -- or just relive a treasured mission. However, there was a
LOT of controversy in fan circles over the liberties taken in the novelizations. I recently read through some '70's letterzines (The Halkan Council, A Piece of the Action), and lots of Trekfen couldn't find anything good to say about Blish, Lawrence & Lawrence's work.
I don't agree; the first
Star Trek book I ever bought was
Star Trek 6, sometime in 1972. 48 years later, here I still am, buying and reading
Star Trek fiction.
Why did he for instance write Where No Man Has Gone Before in his eighth novel instead of the first and after By Any Other Name? It's really Baffling!
Because Blish never intended to novelize every single episode! He just picked out the scripts that appealed to him, and novelized those. I think he pretty much thought he was done with
Star Trek after his fourth book,
Spock Must Die! But the sales kept going up, so Bantam requested more novelizations, even increasing publication from one a year (
Star Trek through
Star Trek 4) to a staggering four volumes (
Star Trek 5 -
Star Trek 8) in 1972! Then back to one volume a year (
Star Trek 9 -
Mudd's Angels) with a one-year gap between
Star Trek 11 &
Star Trek 12, due to Blish's death in 1975.
Upon rereading the Blish books last year in publication order, it appears that Blish's ghostwriters (wife Judy Blish/J.A. Lawrence and MIL Muriel Lawrence) did the bulk of the writing after
SMD! There is a definite change in style starting with
Star Trek 4. The adaptations were quite definitely longer, and much more faithful to the finished episodes starting with
ST4. That may be due to the demands of the editor/publisher, or because the writing had been turned over to actual fans of the show (which Blish himself never really was).