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Trek authors galore in "Thrilling Wonder Stories, Volume 2"

Therin of Andor

Admiral
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"Thrilling Wonder Stories", Volume 2 (2009)
by Ian McLean, on Flickr

I first saw an entry for this exciting 2009 trade paperback volume of short stories, novellas, classic reprinted stories, and "Star Trek"-related articles on eBay, for a horrendous price and even more horrendous airmail postage. I saved the auction and several years later, it still hadn't sold. I kept a watch every so often and recently received notice from Amazon Prime Video that I could have the book for free postage to Australia, so I finally pounced.

How did I ever miss the promotions for this seemingly now-rare book, edited by Winston Engle? Most of the contributors in it have associations with "Star Trek"!

Stories are by David Gerrold (an advance extract, "Enterprise Fish", from a still-forthcoming novel in his "Chtorr" novel series), Diane Duane, David R George III, Michael Reaves & Steve Perry, Melinda M Snodgrass, Norman Spinrad, Larry Niven, Theodore Sturgeon, Harlan Ellison, Jerry Sohl and Richard Matheson.

A "Star Trek" pitch (George Clayton Johnson's "Rock-a-bye Baby, or Die!") and the original story of "Arena" (by Fredric Brown) are also included, although I do have these in other publications.

Trek-related articles include: "Where No Scribe Has Gone Before" by Marc Scott Zicree; "No Studio, No Network, No Problem" by Crystal Ann Taylor (about Trek fan films); and "I Canna Change the Laws of Physics" by Adam Weiner. Also "Scientifacts" by James Trefil; "Columbus of the Stars: A Trek Not Taken" (about a 1964 SF TV series pitch by Ib Melchior & Vic Lundin, who later played the first onscreen Klingon in TOS); "The Televisualizer" by Scott Ashlin; In Memoriams for Sir Arthur C Clarke & Forrest J Ackerman; the comic strip, "Dr Zotts" by Winston Engle; and reprinted snippets from NASA articles.

The front cover is by Bob Eggleton, who is married to a longtime Trek fandom colleague of mine, Marianne Plumridge. Back cover art by Don Anderson.


"Thrilling Wonder Stories, Volume 2", back cover
by Ian McLean, on Flickr

My curiosity about the existence of a Volume 1 (not Trek-related) was high but I could never find references online, only for many issues of the old "Thrilling Wonder Stories" magazine, but an ad for Volume 1's cover was actually in Volume 2, and so now I have this book coming soon. Much easier to find when you know what cover you're looking for:


"Thrilling Wonder Stories, Volume 1" promo (left)
by Ian McLean, on Flickr

Accompanying George Clayton Johnson's old Trek episode pitch is art by Michael Okuda on page 215.

A fan film, "New Voyages: World Enough and Time", is covered in several places in the volume:


"Thrilling Wonder Stories, Volume 2", pic of Takei, Zicree and Engle
by Ian McLean, on Flickr


"Thrilling Wonder Stories, Volume 2", pic of Katia Mangani
by Ian McLean, on Flickr
 
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I read volumes 1 and 2 back when they came out; Winston Engle had an ambitious planned publication program, which never came to fruition. It was supposed to be quarterly, but volume 2 came out almost two years after volume 1; the books are filled with indications of projects that never came to fruition. (I wanted that Space Salvage, Inc. fix-up.) David R. George III promoted volume 2 here on the TrekBBS back when it came out, so I'm not sure how you missed them. (They were cheap if you bought direct from the publisher.)

I reviewed them on my LiveJournal back in the day: https://steve-mollmann.livejournal.com/134619.html

I ended up finding the non-Trek volume better than the Trek one. No one's work in volume 2 is their best stuff.
 
David R. George III promoted volume 2 here on the TrekBBS back when it came out...

I did think I had a memory of him doing so, but somehow my brain didn't register that the contents would demand to be a part of my Trek collection. Nor that there were articles on the Trek fan films.

I did find a relatively inexpensive copy of Volume 1 and it is on its way! The completist in me needs that Volume 1! :)
 
I first saw an entry for this exciting 2009 trade paperback volume of short stories, novellas, classic reprinted stories, and "Star Trek"-related articles on eBay, for a horrendous price and even more horrendous airmail postage. I saved the auction and several years later, it still hadn't sold. I kept a watch every so often and recently received notice from Amazon Prime Video that I could have the book for free postage to Australia, so I finally pounced.

Sorry for asking, but I'm just really curious about this: how and why was a video streaming service giving away free books?
 
Sorry for asking, but I'm just really curious about this: how and why was a video streaming service giving away free books?

I joined Amazon Prime Video a few years ago to watch "Star Trek: Picard" on their streaming service. They sometimes offer me free postage on books I that I order from Amazon.com.au, the Australian arm of Amazon US. The book wasn't free, just the postage, as a promo to encourage me to order books. A significant savings on books coming from overseas.
 
I did find a relatively inexpensive copy of Volume 1 and it is on its way! The completist in me needs that Volume 1! :)

Something weird happened with the Volume 1 I had on order. It suddenly went unavailable and the price vanished.

Cancelled that one and found another on eBay at a reasonable price.

One day… ;)
 
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