It’s funny, I’ve never been fond of her writing. I particularly don’t care for her Treks 2-4 novelizations (even though they have “deleted scenes”). .
It’s been a while since I looked in the book, but did she do an interview in the “Signature Collection: Duty, Honor, Redemption”? Maybe she only wanted to do the one.
To be fair, novelizations are almost hastily written--by necessity. You usually only have a month or so at most, although, fortunately, the screenwriter has already done a lot of the heavy lifting.
Forty-five days is about my average when it comes to knocking out a novelization.
I prefer three or fourth months for an original novel, as opposed to a novelization, but, in a pinch, I've written a few in a month or less.
These are marathons, of course, in which I have no life for a month and may end up pulling a few all-nighters. And definitely easier when I was younger!![]()
The fastest I've done a movie novelization is ten days. The punchline was, the book never was published -- the production company sat on the manuscript and refused to approve it, screwing the studio, the publisher, and me.
The fastest I've done a movie novelization that actually got published was Serenity, which I did in 2.5 weeks.
For reference, are those months for submitting the final manuscript to the publishers or for getting the first draft?
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