On the topic of McCoy's back history, has the character of Joanna been explored at all in recent years?
Joanna (and other aspects of McCoy's backstory) will get a fair amount of exploration in A Choice of Catastrophes later this year.

On the topic of McCoy's back history, has the character of Joanna been explored at all in recent years?
I just looked up Shadows on the Sun, and it sounds like one I might have to check out. Where did the concept of McCoy joining Starfleet to get away from his ex-wife come from? I thought it was something new they came with for the last movie, but obviously it's older if it was used here to.
Oh, it's much, much older. As D. C. Fontana explains in her introduction to Star Trek 365, it's something that DeForest Kelley came up with as part of his backstory for the character. After the first season, Fontana asked the actors for their insights into the characters, Kelley made the suggestion that he had a daughter and a broken marriage, and Fontana added that to the April 1967 revision of the writers' bible. The relevant section is quoted in spread 23 of Star Trek 365. "We will suspect that it was the bitterness of this marriage and divorce which turned McCoy to the Space Service."
McCoy's bitter divorce (along with the existence of his daughter Joanna) is one of those things that's been "known" in fandom forever even though it was never onscreen, because it was mentioned in the writers' bible and The Making of Star Trek. The TMoST version (p. 240) reads:
...McCoy's unhappy marriage and subsequent divorce made him long for an escape from familiar and painful surroundings. He therefore plunged into intensive courses in Space Medicine and then volunteered for Star Fleet. Dr. McCoy, like many a man before him, has taken up wandering in order to get away from painful memories.
The earliest prose work to address McCoy's divorce and subsequent choice to join Starfleet was Joe Haldeman's Planet of Judgment for Bantam. There were also a couple of Gold Key comics dealing with McCoy's daughter (there called Barbara) which probably came out earlier, but I don't recall if they addressed his divorce.
Other than Reunion and Shadows on the Sun, which seem to be the best-received MJF novels, are there other notable novels worth reading?
Excellent news. I'll have to check that.On the topic of McCoy's back history, has the character of Joanna been explored at all in recent years?
Joanna (and other aspects of McCoy's backstory) will get a fair amount of exploration in A Choice of Catastrophes later this year.![]()
Oh, crap, I completely forgot about that book. I absolutely loved every entry, even if the art got a bit weird at times. The Q Continuum and Cardassian (which, along with A Stitch in Time, got me interested in Cardassian culture) entries are the stories.Going outside the novels, I though MJF's New Worlds, New Civilizations, a collection of "articles" accompanied by artwork, was excellent. Some of his best writing and some great pictures.
I liked "Double, Double" A LOT. "Kahlass" and Starfleet, Year One" were also quite enjoyable. "Reunion" I thought was OK. I'm definitely NOT a fan of his "Stargazer" series. I haven't read many of his recent books, including "A Death in Winter", mostly because I'm not excited about the decision to get Picard and Crusher together.
One issue with him was he would create some cool species and never revisit them like the Nuyyad.
I can understand why people might say the latter about aliens being reused from the TV show. But are there really any races from the novels that people have complained about being overused?See, this is somewhere where the authors really just can't win. For every person who says "The Nuyyad were cool; we should have seen them again", someone else will say "Can't MJF invent some new aliens?"
I can understand why people might say the latter about aliens being reused from the TV show. But are there really any races from the novels that people have complained about being overused?
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