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The Best of Peter David

I've been rereading some of David's work in light of his passing. I was reading "I,Q" (co-written by the man himself) when I ran across this complete non sequitur. Speaking of Jadzia Dax, he says: "She was quite a woman. I wonder if she shaved. Maybe at a more quiet time I'd get a chance to ask her." (p150 hardcover edition) What? Is it just me or does that seem really weird? Is this perhaps some inside joke?
 
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I've been rereading some of David's work in light of his passing. I was reading "I,Q" (co-written by the man himself) when I ran across this complete non sequitur. Speaking of Jadzia Dax, he says: "She was quite a woman. I wonder if she shaved. Maybe at a more quiet time I'd get a chance to ask her." (p150 hardcover edition) What? Is it just me or does that seem really weird? Is this perhaps some inside joke?
Just good old fashioned sexism. Q is saying Dax is so manly, she might grow facial hair.
 
Of PAD's non-Trek work, I love Knight Life and the Swamp Thing novelisation, but I adore Howling Mad (about a wolf, bitten by a wereworf, who turns into a man at full moon) and his novelisation of the Ang Lee Hulk film, which comes off almost as a horror novel and was really well done.

I liked almost all of his Trek stuff, but my favourites are Imzadi, Q-In-Law and A Rock and a Hard Place. The Rift was also great.
 
Howling Mad, Knightlife, Sir Apropos of Nothing. All great stuff. I saw a listing for a book about the daughter of Robin Hood that he wrote before he passed that I am now even more eager to pick up and read than I was before.

A quick Google search tells me that the book is called Robyne of Sherwood,  and I will make it my mission to find this book.
 
Howling Mad, Knightlife, Sir Apropos of Nothing. All great stuff. I saw a listing for a book about the daughter of Robin Hood that he wrote before he passed that I am now even more eager to pick up and read than I was before.

A quick Google search tells me that the book is called Robyne of Sherwood,  and I will make it my mission to find this book.
I enjoyed Robyne, but it felt very much like Act 1 of a longer, Apropos-sized book (something I also noticed in the final Apropos book, where there was literally a moment where the narration noted that he'd reached the part where there'd be some wacky episodic adventures that would end up tying in with or reflecting thematically upon on the main plot, but Apropos/PAD was tired and preferred to cut to the chase). I don't begrudge PAD either novel under the circumstances (especially since, teasing a final epic conclusion aside, Pyramid Schemes resolved some foreshadowing from the first book that apparently I and I alone had been waiting to see paid off for a good number of years), and they're way more complete than, say, The Salmon of Doubt, four chapters of a novel Douglas Adams was intending to switch from magical-realism contemporary detective story to far-out space-opera sci-fi and so are totally unrepresentative of what he might've completed in a kinder world.

Thanks to various anthology Kickstarter bonus gifts, I also have two or three more obscure PAD titles waiting for me (his memoir, the Artful Dodger book, and I thought I had his Peter Pan book, but I don't see it on my shelf). I also saw there was a second edition of Writing For Comics, I'll have to grab that at some point, if only in hopes for another bit of gossip as tasty as "I came up with the idea of Magneto ripping out Wolverine's bones, but I didn't think anyone would actually do it."
 
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