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Old school Trek authors here?

EnriqueH

Commodore
Commodore
I noticed, of course, some of the contemporary Trek authors come here.

But what about those that wrote Trek novels back in the day?

Diane Duane, JM Dillard, Vonda McIntyre, Howard Weinstein, Peter David, the Reeves-Stevens.

Do any of those guys hang out here?
 
I think I might have seen one of the authors of the Vulcan's (Noun) books here once or twice. I don't know if Greg Cox would be considered old school, he posts here on a fairly regular basis.
 
Yeah, I've seen Greg Cox on here quite a bit.

I thought of him as being contemporary, though I know he's been writing Trek for several years.
 
I noticed, of course, some of the contemporary Trek authors come here.

But what about those that wrote Trek novels back in the day?

Diane Duane, JM Dillard, Vonda McIntyre, Howard Weinstein, Peter David, the Reeves-Stevens.

Do any of those guys hang out here?
Alan Dean Foster is here. He hasn't posted much, though.
 
But what about those that wrote Trek novels back in the day?

garamet often drops in. She's Margaret Wander Bonanno. She and her friend, Gene DeWeese (now deceased), used to contribute to Psi Phi and I think they both jumped across to here when that site declined.

Jill Sherwin has been here (she's written Trek non fiction). Also Heather Jarman, IIRC. And Susan Shwartz (although her writing partner, Josepha Sherman passed away).
 
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Ah, so Dean Foster and Bonanno come around and make cameo appearances.

I have a huge collection of Alan Dean Foster's books, so I'm a big fan of his.

I've also enjoyed Gene DeWeese's books.

You mention Jill Sherwin. I have a pretty extensive Trek library, but don't recall her name. What did she write?
 
Yeah, I've seen Greg Cox on here quite a bit.

I thought of him as being contemporary, though I know he's been writing Trek for several years.

Going on two decades now . . . :)

That's crazy!

I must be getting old!

I was reading Trek books in the late 80s, and I believe you wrote your first Trek book around 97 or 98.

Time flies, but I still thought of you as a newer Trek author.

Good stuff.
 
Yeah, I've seen Greg Cox on here quite a bit.

I thought of him as being contemporary, though I know he's been writing Trek for several years.

Going on two decades now . . . :)

That's crazy!

I must be getting old!

I was reading Trek books in the late 80s, and I believe you wrote your first Trek book around 97 or 98.

Time flies, but I still thought of you as a newer Trek author.

Good stuff.

Tell me about it. But my first Trek book came out in 1995, so I was presumably writing it in '94--which would be twenty years ago!

But glad to know I'm not regarded as a fossil just yet! :)
 
I was reading Trek books in the late 80s, and I believe you wrote your first Trek book around 97 or 98.
I've seen his photo, and he's not that old (unless he's remarkably youthful-looking for his age)...





:p
 
I own all of Bonanno's Trek books, but I only got around to reading Probe.

I can remember begging my parents to buy it for me the day it came out. I found out years later that it was a troubled book. What a shame.
 
I own all of Bonanno's Trek books, but I only got around to reading Probe.

I can remember begging my parents to buy it for me the day it came out. I found out years later that it was a troubled book. What a shame.
Although (IMO, at least) the final published novel still turned out way better than it had any real right to be, considering its tumultuous production-history -- Gene DeWeese really worked a miracle, despite being, I think, the third writer or something on the project (J.M. Dillard being number two), and he and Margaret actually formed a lasting friendship out of that whole event.

Re-read it about a year-and-a-half ago (hadn't picked it up in quite a few years), and had a helluva good time with it.
 
J.M. Dillard revised Brad Ferguson's Flag Full of Stars and she revised Probe.

I wonder why she did so much rewriting.

Her "Lost Years" book is one of my all time favorite books.
 
J.M. Dillard revised Brad Ferguson's Flag Full of Stars and she revised Probe.

I wonder why she did so much rewriting.

Probably because the editor at the time found her reliable and asked her to do the job. And after she did it once, it makes sense the editor would turn to her when it had to be done again.
 
I own all of Bonanno's Trek books, but I only got around to reading Probe.

You own Strangers From the Sky but haven't read it yet? You need to remedy that, stat! :)

(But be forewarned, it's not your typical Star Trek novel.)
 
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