How many books does a writer generally have to have published before Pocket Books would seriously consider them for a Trek writing project?
I've been working on "A Strong Second Half" for two years now.
The first two thirds of my (admittedly somewhat short and probably poorly written) novel seem to work out well. But the ending is a major problem.
Keep trying, Dayton3, the only limit is your persistence. I've written one crime novel that didn't work out, and I've just started on a second. I'd like to write a trek novel, but every science project I've started has been a non-starter, so to speak. One day, maybe I'll get lucky, but for now, I write trek fanfic and crime to get published.I've been working on "A Strong Second Half" for two years now.
The first two thirds of my (admittedly somewhat short and probably poorly written) novel seem to work out well. But the ending is a major problem.
Just goes to show... you can't judge a book by its title.![]()
Keep trying, Dayton3, the only limit is your persistence. I've written one crime novel that didn't work out, and I've just started on a second. I'd like to write a trek novel, but every science project I've started has been a non-starter, so to speak. One day, maybe I'll get lucky, but for now, I write trek fanfic and crime to get published.I've been working on "A Strong Second Half" for two years now.
The first two thirds of my (admittedly somewhat short and probably poorly written) novel seem to work out well. But the ending is a major problem.
Just goes to show... you can't judge a book by its title.![]()
The best we can do is to keep trying.
Of the writers still actively working on Trek, probably Peter David. Of the "recent" writers new to Trek ("recent" being old enough to include KRAD and Wardilmore)... probably James Swallow or David A. McIntee or S.D. Perry.Obviously, folks like James Blish and Alan Dean Foster, who had solid careers before Star Trek ever hit the airwaves, would be right up there, but a lot of the current stable of writers either started there (), or could count their previous credits on one hand. So, who is it who has the best pre-Trek resume?
I was thinking Greg Cox but I looked at his web site and he had a couple ST novels that were a lot earlier than I remembered so he had only a couple books out pre-trek, I was thinking half a dozen at least, but he did have about a dozen short stories published which makes for a good track record.
Of the writers still actively working on Trek, probably Peter David. Of the "recent" writers new to Trek ("recent" being old enough to include KRAD and Wardilmore)... probably James Swallow or David A. McIntee or S.D. Perry.Obviously, folks like James Blish and Alan Dean Foster, who had solid careers before Star Trek ever hit the airwaves, would be right up there, but a lot of the current stable of writers either started there (), or could count their previous credits on one hand. So, who is it who has the best pre-Trek resume?
Huh. That's about four more than I'd remembered.Prior to the publication of Fatal Error (my first Trek prose), I had five novels to my credit
Huh. That's about four more than I'd remembered.Prior to the publication of Fatal Error (my first Trek prose), I had five novels to my credit![]()
Of the writers still actively working on Trek, probably Peter David. Of the "recent" writers new to Trek ("recent" being old enough to include KRAD and Wardilmore)... probably James Swallow or David A. McIntee or S.D. Perry.Obviously, folks like James Blish and Alan Dean Foster, who had solid careers before Star Trek ever hit the airwaves, would be right up there, but a lot of the current stable of writers either started there (), or could count their previous credits on one hand. So, who is it who has the best pre-Trek resume?
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