Fully agree. I saw a Star Trek shelf at my local B&N and it was just sad. Four books, one of which was an actual novel. Star Wars had two whole shelves below it. CBS & Pocket need to up the game a bit, maybe put out a legacy line like Disney did with the Legends titles.What I’d like is to have a few more Star Trek books a year again. That would make it easier to get a good mix of new writers, frequent contributors, and folks who haven’t had a chance to contribute in some time. I also miss the days of Pocket editors like John Ordover and Marco Palmieri communicating with fans and giving us an idea of what goes on in the Pocket Star Trek office.
Four?!? The one I went in last week had one Star Trek novel.Fully agree. I saw a Star Trek shelf at my local B&N and it was just sad. Four books, one of which was an actual novel. Star Wars had two whole shelves below it. CBS & Pocket need to up the game a bit, maybe put out a legacy line like Disney did with the Legends titles.
The new SNW novel, Spock's autobiography, and two of the Robb Pearlman picture books. That was it.Four?!? The one I went in last week had one Star Trek novel.
Number one: Diane Duane.
Fully agree. I saw a Star Trek shelf at my local B&N and it was just sad. Four books, one of which was an actual novel.
News to me.KRAD has been shut out of writing new Star Trek novels
And I forgot to mention that an early DD masterpiece, The Wounded Sky, was openly acknowledged inspiration for TNG: "Where No One Has Gone Before," an episode on which she is a credited writer.She wrote books that are still being sought out, over four decades later, and the last I heard, she was still alive and writing.
They recently rebranded my local Chapters to an Indigo. I stopped in there recently to try to get Ring of Fire (couldn’t… the computer said they had two, but they couldn’t find them)
News to me.
Possibly it got misshelved under "M" for Mack? Instead of in Trek section where it belonged?
And I forgot to mention that an early DD masterpiece, The Wounded Sky, was openly acknowledged inspiration for TNG: "Where No One Has Gone Before," an episode on which she is a credited writer.
I likewise wouldn't mind seeing another "Piper" novel from Diane Carey, especially since "Lower Deckers" are now a thing.
In all seriousness, though, Dafydd ab Hugh; Voyager: Final Fury really stood out to me for its humor, imagination, and character-writing. I remember enjoying Balance of Power as well- probably the best Wesley story before the Coda series came out. So, I'd love to see him have another crack at it.
Yeah, they just opened a new Barnes and Noble near me (one of their new, compact Ikea-maze layouts) and I was disappointed that there were no Trek books at all... until I realized they were shelved by author. IIRC, all the franchises aside from Star Wars were shelved by author, rather than by overarching title or in a big lump after the end of the alphabet like I was used to.Possibly it got misshelved under "M" for Mack? Instead of in Trek section where it belonged?
I ran into this once with a Trek novel by Christopher Bennett. The computer at a downtown B&N insisted they had a copy, but neither I nor a helpful employee could find it in the Star Trek section.
Finally, it occurred to me to look under "B" in the SF section. Sure enough, there it was!
That was my own impression, refamiliarizing myself with what Memory Alpha had to say about the genesis of the episode. Even with the screen credit and the early draft, there wasn't much left but inspiration. The way I read it, she and Reaves might have even been within their rights to demand that they be credited as something to the general effect of "Alan and Alma Smithee." And as good as the episode was, it doesn't hold a candle to The Wounded Sky.Although what happened, according to Duane, was that Michael Reaves had an idea for a TNG pitch that he realized might have been unconsciously inspired by The Wounded Sky, so he invited her to collaborate on it. I believe that what they turned in was much closer to The Wounded Sky, but due to the season 1 writing staff upheavals, it got taken away from them and rewritten so completely that barely any of Duane & Reaves's work remained in the final episode.
That was my own impression, refamiliarizing myself with what Memory Alpha had to say about the genesis of the episode. Even with the screen credit and the early draft, there wasn't much left but inspiration.
The way I read it, she and Reaves might have even been within their rights to demand that they be credited as something to the general effect of "Alan and Alma Smithee." And as good as the episode was, it doesn't hold a candle to The Wounded Sky.
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