It could have been a special library binding edition not available in stores.
Yeah, if it was the same page size, it was probably the paperback in a library re-binding.
It could have been a special library binding edition not available in stores.
In-universe, I don't think there's anything to say that such an impact on Smith might not have taken some period of time to start manifesting itself. To shoehorn a focus on him during those pilot derived episodes would have been difficult given the content that had to be used and the fact the Irwin Allen would likely have been loath to spend any more production money than necessary as those episodes were already essentially in the can.
On the contrary -- Smith's very existence was a massive act of shoehorning. Remember, he wasn't in the original pilot at all. And when he was added, they spread out the original pilot's content among the first five episodes -- which means that basically 80% of the material in those first five episodes was new content featuring Smith and the Robot. So he was very heavily focused on from the beginning.
I know that we've moved on from this pleasant interlude, but I have only one (I think) more thing to add. The material from No
Place to Hide actually appeared in only four of the first five broadcast episodes, The Derelict not containing any at all.
By the way what is your take on the identity of Aeolus 14 Umbra? Merely a terrestrial competitor to the U.S. in this desperate race to the stars, or perhaps, as has been posited more than a few times, alien operatives seeking to prevent humans venturing into space?
It could have been, but we're talking a long time ago so I can't recall specifics. To my eye at the time it looked like something you could have bought in the store, but I never encountered another hardcover edition anywhere after that. And trying a Google search for a hardcopy edition of TMoST I come up with nothing.But a hardcover? I would love to see that.
It could have been a special library binding edition not available in stores.
Since the title's different, could it be a foreign edition?This is the oddest one I've seen. They even changed the title. Does anyone know the publisher and year?
Yep, that's the one I bought. I hadn't realized the title was wrong, I just went for the authors names.Since the title's different, could it be a foreign edition?This is the oddest one I've seen. They even changed the title. Does anyone know the publisher and year?
Oh wait, Memory Alpha says it's a 1991 release from Titan Books, which is a UK company.
Yep, that's the one I bought. I hadn't realized the title was wrong, I just went for the authors names.Since the title's different, could it be a foreign edition?This is the oddest one I've seen. They even changed the title. Does anyone know the publisher and year?
Oh wait, Memory Alpha says it's a 1991 release from Titan Books, which is a UK company.
Here is the backside for you:
Anything else you want me to check? The content should be the same, right?
Yep, that's the one I bought. I hadn't realized the title was wrong, I just went for the authors names.Since the title's different, could it be a foreign edition?
Oh wait, Memory Alpha says it's a 1991 release from Titan Books, which is a UK company.
Here is the backside for you:
Anything else you want me to check? The content should be the same, right?
What happens at warp factor 8??? I don't recall anything special being mentioned about warp 8.
At Warp Factor Eight (512 times the speed of light) the ship's structure begins to show considerable strain, due to the inability of the ship's field mechanisms to compensate. Warp Factor Six is therefore exceeded only in instances of extreme emergency.
My copy (10th printing, July 1972) says "field mechanisms."What happens at warp factor 8??? I don't recall anything special being mentioned about warp 8.
From p. 191 (13th US printing):
At Warp Factor Eight (512 times the speed of light) the ship's structure begins to show considerable strain, due to the inability of the ship's fluid mechanisms to compensate.
That and the beatings it took suggests the Constitution-class were apparently tough ships.
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