Joel Engel's biography is very good, but it's also quite critical. Major sources, for instance, were D.C. Fontana and David Gerrold, who had obvious axes to grind.
Yvonne Fern's Gene Roddenberry: The Last Conversation is often lumped in with the Roddenberry bios in discussion, but it isn't, really. It's an interesting book to read, but it's also controversial in that the conversation described almost certainly did not happen.
Oh? Didn't know that. Is there a source for that?
Fern wrote a long-ish introduction for the paperback which addresses the major criticism of the hardcover edition, namely that Roddenberry was too physically ill and too far into his mental decline to have had the long and deep conversations that Fern reported.
I tend to view Gene Roddenberry: The Last Conversation in the same way that I view Edmund Morris' biography of Ronald Reagan, Dutch -- the book itself is a lie, but it's a lie that reveals a deeper truth. I think that Fern invented some of her conversations in the same way that Morris invented his personal anecdotes of Reagan, but they were inventions in service of the author's search for the truth about their subject.
IIRC, David Gerrold accused Fern of making the whole thing up, saying that Roddenberry was simply not capable of holding any real conversation at the time the conversations in the book supposedly happened. I'd like to think the part about Heinlein's Space Cadet being the only SF novel GR could name as an influence was true, partly because it makes a certain degree of sense and partly because it supports the revisionist history from Solow and Justman's Inside Star Trek book, which says that GR basically knew SFA about SF. Their book trashes a lot of myths about GR and the making of TOS. They have their own agendas, but they provide a lot of evidence, too.
I was a little too brief. I explained my understanding and thinking better in this post from six years ago:
Steve Roby elaborates further down:
In the TNG episode "Encounter at Farpoint," we see Susan as the girl who shows Riker how to use the wall panels, on Enterprise, when he first boards. Then she's all checking out his ass, as he walks away.
Of the Roddenberry bios, definitely avoid the James Van Hise biography. (Though it's the only one that goes in depth on Roddenberry's Tarzan movie script.)
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