This may be more suited for the Sci-Fi & Fantasy area, but I think it suits the TrekLit area…
I just picked up the Star Trek III novelization by Vonda McIntyre at a city library (a book I’ve known about since the film, but just now getting to read it) and while skimming through, I found that McIntyre goes beyond the film, and give the movie and characters a bit more depth…
On the other hand, after reading Terminator: Salvation by Alan Dean Foster (no disrespect to Mr. Foster who has been in the game for a long time) the book reads as if it was just barely tweaked from the script; the characters just go from A to B; not much in character thoughts, not much in distinguishing characteristics…etc….
Moreover, KRAD and his Resident Evil novelizations even went into depth a bit beyond the movies [although, I do question the addition of the ‘n’ word that L.J. uses which didn’t show up in any of the films, and the change of Alice wearing thigh-high boots rather than knee-high boots, the knee high boots which are more practical and keeping in line with the films]. Regardless of those nitpicks; I still enjoyed the novelizations, technically ‘novelization’ since I have yet to read the Resident Evil: Extinction…
My question(s): Are some authors given a deadline to write novelizations? Are some given a bit more leeway to go into depth? Or is everything entirely up to the author?
P.S. Still, after reading the novelization of T-Salvation, I don’t think it would have been a movie I would have checked out in the theatre….
P.S.S. I own the Star Trek V novelization by J.M. Dillard, and plan on reading some of her other novelizations.
I just picked up the Star Trek III novelization by Vonda McIntyre at a city library (a book I’ve known about since the film, but just now getting to read it) and while skimming through, I found that McIntyre goes beyond the film, and give the movie and characters a bit more depth…
On the other hand, after reading Terminator: Salvation by Alan Dean Foster (no disrespect to Mr. Foster who has been in the game for a long time) the book reads as if it was just barely tweaked from the script; the characters just go from A to B; not much in character thoughts, not much in distinguishing characteristics…etc….
Moreover, KRAD and his Resident Evil novelizations even went into depth a bit beyond the movies [although, I do question the addition of the ‘n’ word that L.J. uses which didn’t show up in any of the films, and the change of Alice wearing thigh-high boots rather than knee-high boots, the knee high boots which are more practical and keeping in line with the films]. Regardless of those nitpicks; I still enjoyed the novelizations, technically ‘novelization’ since I have yet to read the Resident Evil: Extinction…
My question(s): Are some authors given a deadline to write novelizations? Are some given a bit more leeway to go into depth? Or is everything entirely up to the author?
P.S. Still, after reading the novelization of T-Salvation, I don’t think it would have been a movie I would have checked out in the theatre….
P.S.S. I own the Star Trek V novelization by J.M. Dillard, and plan on reading some of her other novelizations.