I now have Dayton Ward's Somewhere to Belong, but I'm going to wait a while. The latest turn of the "episode follow-up" thread has me reading about "City on the Edge of Forever" follow-ups. I found and read "Triptych" and "Remembering the Future," and now I'm reading the Crucible Trilogy (I'd forgotten the "doorstop" page-count, and I'd forgotten how many other episodes it covered).
*****
I have only one complaint, on re-reading the Crucible Trilogy:
I will note that I'm finding the consistent usage of "lorry" a bit distracting. Given that the author isn't British, and wasn't writing specifically for a British audience, I have to assume that it's a not-terribly-subtle hint that Edith Keeler is the POV character. But just because she was played by a Brit doesn't make the character British (consider Khan Noonien Singh: an ethnic Indian (probably Punjabi), played by the Mexican Ricardo Montalban, then the British Benedict Cumberbatch, and now the Canadian Desmond Sivan) Was Alexis Carrington also British? (Not a Dynasty fan, I had to go to YouTube just to determine whether she spoke with Ms. Collins' natural accent.)
Looking for a review thread (and not finding one), I ran into some discussion about the late Harlan Ellison having had certain Crucible material suppressed by threatening a lawsuit, and about an "expanded" hardcover edition.
Expanded? It's already at a "doorstop" page-count. (And that's not a complaint, just an observation; LotR is also a doorstop, Narnia is a doorstop, canonical Oz is a doorstop, and The History of Middle Earth is several doorstops.)
(Any time the subject of Harlan Ellison comes up, I think about something [I think] David Gerrold once wrote about him, to the general effect [and I'm paraphrasing because I don't even remotely have an eidetic memory for 40-year-old Starlog columns] that he writes what he writes, whether we call it science fiction or something else.)
*****
I have only one complaint, on re-reading the Crucible Trilogy:
I will note that I'm finding the consistent usage of "lorry" a bit distracting. Given that the author isn't British, and wasn't writing specifically for a British audience, I have to assume that it's a not-terribly-subtle hint that Edith Keeler is the POV character. But just because she was played by a Brit doesn't make the character British (consider Khan Noonien Singh: an ethnic Indian (probably Punjabi), played by the Mexican Ricardo Montalban, then the British Benedict Cumberbatch, and now the Canadian Desmond Sivan) Was Alexis Carrington also British? (Not a Dynasty fan, I had to go to YouTube just to determine whether she spoke with Ms. Collins' natural accent.)
Looking for a review thread (and not finding one), I ran into some discussion about the late Harlan Ellison having had certain Crucible material suppressed by threatening a lawsuit, and about an "expanded" hardcover edition.
Expanded? It's already at a "doorstop" page-count. (And that's not a complaint, just an observation; LotR is also a doorstop, Narnia is a doorstop, canonical Oz is a doorstop, and The History of Middle Earth is several doorstops.)
(Any time the subject of Harlan Ellison comes up, I think about something [I think] David Gerrold once wrote about him, to the general effect [and I'm paraphrasing because I don't even remotely have an eidetic memory for 40-year-old Starlog columns] that he writes what he writes, whether we call it science fiction or something else.)
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