...people do love to claim that the Reeves-Stevenses are mere ghostwriters. Shatner is a dynamic part of the partnership.
Oh, they're not "mere" ghostwriters - the writing is the hard part. Shatner is "merely" the guy who talks into a dictaphone.

...people do love to claim that the Reeves-Stevenses are mere ghostwriters. Shatner is a dynamic part of the partnership.
In as much as you can believe what anyone says about these things, it's more than that. He sits down with Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens and works out a very detailed plot, they do the writing and he has input throughout the process.
Much more than that. Shatner uses a dictophone and narrates into it the basic storyline, all the action sequences and all the Kirk dialogue. Then he passes the tapes to a secretary who types up a manuscript. That goes to the Reeves-Stevens who polish the tech - and the characterisations of TNG, DS9 and VOY guest stars, since Shatner doesn't watch those shows - and then the manuscript goes back to Shatner for more feedback and revisions.
This process has been described in numerous interviews but people do love to claim that the Reeves-Stevenses are mere ghostwriters. Shatner is a dynamic part of the partnership.
I decided to get the book; after the movie leaves, I'll probably be interested in a story about young Kirk.
Collision Course (Star Trek Academy) at Amazon. It has 37 reviews, with a 4-star average.
Oh, they're not "mere" ghostwriters - the writing is the hard part. Shatner is "merely" the guy who talks into a dictaphone.![]()
Therin of Andor, I'm going to go out on a limb here and say you're not writer.
I'm sure that the original (now Prime) timeline will continue to be alive and well in novels and short stories for years to come. They couldn't kill that if they tried, and I can't imagine why anyone connected in any way with Trek would want to.Regarding Shatner's book:
Do you think that they have killed off the original timeline stories? ... Will they still keep making TNG books, even though Picard may not exist in the new timeline?
Yep.Or have they just opened up more opportunities?
It's an interesting take, and some of the Kirk-Spock interactions are very entertaining. It's kind of like the new movie though - enjoy it for what it is and don't worry about how it "fits".I decided to get the book; after the movie leaves, I'll probably be interested in a story about young Kirk.
Collision Course (Star Trek Academy) at Amazon. It has 37 reviews, with a 4-star average.
I decided to get the book; after the movie leaves, I'll probably be interested in a story about young Kirk.
Collision Course (Star Trek Academy) at Amazon. It has 37 reviews, with a 4-star average.
I read and enjoyed a number of the classic books, and they had some unusual stuff in some of them.It's an interesting take, and some of the Kirk-Spock interactions are very entertaining. It's kind of like the new movie though - enjoy it for what it is and don't worry about how it "fits".
Cool; whereabouts is that?Oh good! I just got this for free from Shatners publisher who is in my building...I should start a little Cake-a-zon business....
She has played Uhura through six "Star Trek" movies, up to this summer's prequel. Even though she's not in this particular film, she did have her day on the set.
"While they were shooting, J.J. Abrams invited me to lunch and invited me to come to the set," she says. "I was so excited. The surprise he had going was that the young woman playing Uhura didn't know I was coming. She just gasped.
"As J.J. had planned it, she didn't have to shoot, so we sat for two hours and talked, and it was as though I had known her all her life. I was so honored. I thought I was seeing myself -- I knew I was in good hands. She just picked my brain." Nichols has seen the new "Star Trek" movie twice and says she'll probably see it two or three more times. She likes what actress Zoe Saldana has done with Uhura.
"When I see her come on, that's me and I'm living it," she says. "A little ways into the movie, I realized she had taken to heart what I said and became more reserved and tighter. I'm so proud of her. She took a role that was established and gave it life.
"Now I know who I was before I got on that ship for that first mission. It's so exciting for me and rewarding.
"J.J. and she did me honor," Nichols says.
"J.J. with his casting did all his characters honor.
It's so nice to see Spock back in the future." And does Nichols see herself in a "Star Trek" future?
"I don't know what will happen, as quiet as it's kept," she says.
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