Thank you! Cancelled Amazon and ordered from Book DepositoryI got mine from the book depository awhile back in the uk. Only read two chapters so far.

Thank you! Cancelled Amazon and ordered from Book DepositoryI got mine from the book depository awhile back in the uk. Only read two chapters so far.
We recently had Alan Dean Foster on Literary Treks to discuss this novel. It was a wonderful experience getting to talk to someone who has had so much to do with the history of Trek! Plus, we enjoyed The Unsettling Stars!
Literary Treks 302: What If A.I. Becomes Mommy?
I think that is almost certainly the first time I've heard ADF's voice. Thank you. I vaguely recall at least one convention I attended (a "free con" at a local shopping mall, where Stephen Goldin and Kathleen Sky shared a stage around the time Trek to Madworld was released, and possibly also one or more Southern California Creation events) had him scheduled, but I somehow missed him.
AT LAST I HAVE IT AFTER TEN LONG YEARS![]()
It's been a long road, but my time is finally here!It's been a long time, getting from there to here.
Love is all around, no need to fake it.It's been a long road, but my time is finally here!
I finished the book this morning, and just started listening to the Literary Treks interview, and I just wanted to point out as soon as I heard it that, apparently, even Alan Dean Foster has fallen for the urban legend that Alan Dean Foster ghostwrote the novelization of TMP (okay, okay, his phrasing is ambiguous, and he was probably referring to his work on the actual movie, but in-context, it sounded like he was talking about novelizing that film). I giggled.
It was the part at the very beginning where he was talking about how he was recruited to do the novelization of ST09, the way he listed the reasons (paraphrasing, "My other novelizations, my original novels, and, of course, The Motion Picture"), the way it was thrown in with his other prose work made me think for a moment he was still talking about writing books when he mentioned TMP. Of course, towards the end of the interview, you talked about his contributions to the film (and not the novelization) in more detail, but I hadn't heard that part yet when I wrote the post feeling like a funny had been made.That's funny, because during that interview, we directly talked about the novelization, and the fact that he DIDN'T write it whatsoever. He did do the initial story for TMP, and we did talk about that as well.
Just finished. Can anyone cite
an enemy similar to the Refugees?
As to voice, only McCoy might be either Urban or Kelley.
Well, that's entirely correct, I agree -- still, it seemed like a reasonable question to ask on part of the crew who just rescued the colony ship...Even if somebody did, it's unlikely they'd be able to come up with a meaningful answer, as it quickly becomes obvious thatthey don't really understand the problem themselves.
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