The Captain's Table novels are partially first person (the framing story parts are not).
Oh, of course. I forgot about those.
The Captain's Table novels are partially first person (the framing story parts are not).
That is odd, and it really shows the gaps in Memory Beta's coverage of older works. :/Yes. Lisa Nguyen, Ingrit Tomson, Jon Stanger, and Lamia. Thanks. I didn't mention that they had originated in Dillard's works, but I had kind of figured as much. My understanding is that they were at least intended for other writers to pick them up, although I can't recall whether or not that actually happened. And I find it odd that Memory Beta includes a number of other characters named Nguyen, but not Lisa.
The author-surrogacy has always been the aspect that most exemplifies a Mary Sue to me, regardless of whether there's any particular "upstaging" involved. Wish fulfillment doesn't have to be about outdoing your favourite characters--if I write a Superman story where the main character is Superman's pal and that character is obviously based on me, that character is a Mary Sue even if they don't have any special abilities. (Kevin Smith's apperances on Degrassi are like this, where he plays what comes across as a Mary Sue version of himself.)As to the "Mary Sue" genre, I've always understood it to mean stories in which an obvious author-surrogate character, completely original to the author, takes center-stage in a milieu that is not original to the author, completely upstaging the milieu's regular characters. (In my aforementioned fanfic, the interviewer is a character whose name I contrived to share my own initials, an unabashed author-surrogate, but he's not really center-stage enough to be a "Larry Stu" character.)
Wish fulfillment doesn't have to be about outdoing your favourite characters--if I write a Superman story where the main character is Superman's pal and that character is obviously based on me, that character is a Mary Sue even if they don't have any special abilities.
In that sense, analysing what Piper goes through is beside the point--her "obvious author-surrogate" qualities outweigh any particular plot machinations.
The way I see it, there's definitely a difference between a standard Author Avatar and a full-on Mary Sue.
If, on the other hand, I made the same character, but made him horribly nearsighted, kinda pudgy around the waist, emotionally flat, grouchy, annoyingly critical of mostly everything, and, despite any outstanding abilities, generally unlikeable enough that it would likely require divine intervention to keep him from dying alone and unmourned (In other words, more actually like me), and he is, at best, the Lancer of the story, then he's Not a Sue/Stu, but he's still an Author Avatar.
But I disagree with the assertion that "done badly" is part of the definition of a Mary-Sue. "Usually done badly," yes, but the exceptions can be truly brilliant.
Thank you. I have all the animated episodes. Those are the only Star Trek episodes I have that are truly mine. I got them at a Wal-Mart. I liked seeing Christopher Lloyd in Star Trek III as Kruge or Kluge. Any chance they might use him in another movie doing another role? He plays a good Klingon, but I liked him better as Jim on Taxi. Maybe they could do a Star Trek movie with him and the rest of the cast from that show: Danny DeVito, Judd Hirsch, Tony Danza, Marilou Henner, the guy who played that young actor, and the one who played Latka who was the immigrant.
Maybe they could do a Star Trek movie with him and the rest of the cast from that show: Danny DeVito, Judd Hirsch, Tony Danza, Marilou Henner, the guy who played that young actor, and the one who played Latka who was the immigrant.
So did Jeff Conaway, the actor who played Bobby, the actor character.Andy Kaufman (Latka's actor) died in 1984.
Andy Kaufman (Latka's actor) died in 1984.
So did Jeff Conaway, the actor who played Bobby, the actor character.
Incidentally, Larry Nemecek's ST:TNG Companion mentions that Christopher Lloyd nearly played another guest-role on that series, some time during Seasons 5-7 (can't recall which season, specifically, right off the top of my head).Thank you. I have all the animated episodes. Those are the only Star Trek episodes I have that are truly mine. I got them at a Wal-Mart. I liked seeing Christopher Lloyd in Star Trek III as Kruge or Kluge. Any chance they might use him in another movie doing another role? He plays a good Klingon, but I liked him better as Jim on Taxi.
The post-Nemesis Borg novels are: Resistance, Before Dishonor, Greater than the Sum parts of Full Circle and the Star Trek: Destiny trilogy.
What does parts of Full Circle mean? I don't suppose that means that Full Circle is a book that's about another Borg attack.
If no one knows, please say that, so I don't have to ask the question again. On googling before I tried this book on Borg Books, it seems like I found at least maybe eight or nine of them. I don't remember because how many there were because I gave this list to the nearest comic book shop.
God bless, Jason Irelan
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