^The book is The 34th Rule (i.e. "War is good for business"). As yet, the 39th Rule of Acquisition is unrevealed.
The other thing to keep in mind, while on the subject of audio books, is that they're not done by the people who do the books. The editors of the books, IIRC what some of them said here, do not decide which books should become audio books, the people in the audio department do.
QUOTE]
Not sure that's right. The audio book is included in the author's contract to begin with.
When you look at how some of the most self-indulgent Ordover projects got the audio treatment, despite being 3 or 4 part mini-series, while Marco couldn't get Stitch in Time (written by an actor!) turned into an audio book tells me that Ordover projects had a lot of pull at S&S Audio.
I sincerely doubt that was an Ordover vs. Palmieri thing. It was more like a "DS9 never sells as well as TNG" thing.
In my experience, Subrights and Marketing couldn't care less who the editor of a book is . . . .
As yet, the 39th Rule of Acquisition is unrevealed.
I can only think of one specific instance, that really made me stop and think "Is Scott actually doing a bad Shatner impression?". For anyone interested, that's in Season 1's Cold Front - where Archer has invited some Religious alien types aboard and says "Tell Chef to prepare --- something."^My point is that Shatner doesn't use all those pauses in his speech the way he's caricatured as doing, that the cliched "Shatner impression" doesn't sound that much like Shatner at all. But Bakula really does have a lot of long, random pauses in his speech, so ironically the bad Shatner impression is closer to Bakula.
Now, Jeffrey Combs is an especially good idea. He always struck me as having a facility for voices that aren't his own. Whereas listening to the priniciple trio of Enterprise (Scott, Jolene & Connor) would be unmistakably their own characters.I'd love to hear Scott Bakula read something. I fancy his odd way of delivery. Jeffrey Combs would do a great job, too.
I must say I was quite surprised at the sparcity of Trek audio books, especially since audio books are so en vogue these days.
I can only think of one specific instance, that really made me stop and think "Is Scott actually doing a bad Shatner impression?". For anyone interested, that's in Season 1's Cold Front - where Archer has invited some Religious alien types aboard and says "Tell Chef to prepare --- something."
Not sure that's right. The audio book is included in the author's contract to begin with.
If it's negotiated that way. The authors used to be offered first refusal, but audio deadlines became a problem, IIRC. The very early ST audios were not simultaneous releases. But it seems that once a few titles were abridged by George Truett, to be in shops at the same time as the book, and still sold as well as those abridged by the original authors, the process may have become more reliable to "let George do it".
Well, by then the audio sales for DS9 had slipped way down. IIRC. S&S Audioworks were supposedly very disappointed with sales of the audio of "The 34th Rule" (and "Millennium" Vol 1, which - me speculating wildly here - probably would have had two more audio volumes if the first one had sold solidly?), and this made them very wary of later DS9 novels, including the eagerly-awaited hardcover, "Unity", the first Pocket hardcover in a looooooong line of ST hardcovers to miss out on an audio version.
"The 34th Rule" would have informed S&S Audio's marketing decisions re "A Stitch in Time", since both had DS9 actor participation as author (and narrator).
I had an email discussion with John Ordover when the first "New Frontier" audio was announced. I wrote and suggested Suzie Plakson as narrator and he thought it was an excellent idea, but that he could only make suggestions to S&S Audioworks, and they didn't have to listen to him.
They ended up going with Joe Morton, who didn't even have a previous ST connection - the first time that happened, IIRC - and I was very disappointed with Morton's bizarre Calhoun delivery.
Mr. Truett's list of published works besides audio books (zilch) has me wondering whether they got one of the quickie novelization authors to do the abridging under a pseudonym, or actually let someone with no writing experience abridge the books for audio.
At that point S&S Audio were committed to doing simultaneous audio releases of each new hardcover novel (perhaps contractually). And sales of the first two "Genesis Wave" hardcovers were incredibly good, leading to the next two installments. I would assume that books that sold well would be mirrored by the sales of their audio versions. I don't know how well the first two GW audios went, but we were also now entering an era where unabridged audios, made possible via then-recent download and CD technology, were replacing abridgements in commercial popularity.I wouldn't be surprised if those two only sold moderately, but they didn't kill the whole audio line like Genisis Wave and the Vulcan's books did. And I have a hard time believing S&S Audiorom were looking at stellar sales numbers from the prior entries when they decided Vulcan's Soul and Genisis Wave IV would get the audio treatment.
Joe Morton is not necessarily a "lousy talent choice", but I simply didn't care for his bizarre delivery for Calhoun. My main problem was that I started collecting ST audios many because they always used ST actors. But the ST talent must have been pricing themselves out of audio work, 'cos after Morton the mold was broken, and we suddenly got a number of non-ST narrators from S&S Audio's regular stable.I wholeheartedly agree that the lousy talent choices were all on S&S audio.
I had an email discussion with John Ordover when the first "New Frontier" audio was announced. I wrote and suggested Suzie Plakson as narrator and he thought it was an excellent idea, but that he could only make suggestions to S&S Audioworks, and they didn't have to listen to him.
They ended up going with Joe Morton, who didn't even have a previous ST connection - the first time that happened, IIRC - and I was very disappointed with Morton's bizarre Calhoun delivery.
^ If you're just interested to hear his delivery, there's a clip from NF: Restoration read by him on one of S&S' sites:
http://www.simonandschuster.biz/content/book.cfm?pid=508326&tab=24&agid=5
The German editions of Rise of the Federation were made into audiobooks, not sure about the original versions though.Does anybody know if Enterprise ever got an audiobook made?
Does anybody know if Enterprise ever got an audiobook made?
http://therinofandor.blogspot.com/p/i-hear-star-trek.html
No, not in English, but if Christopher writes another one, almost all the new books are getting accompanying unabridged audio downloads.
Ooops! Necro thread. Sorry.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.