I'd like to try to at least finish the Worlds of DS9 books but then finally read Homecoming and Further Shore. Have to find out what happened to Voyager after they got home.
However, I am not certain I approve of all those movie novelizations.
. However, I am not certain I approve of all those movie novelizations. .
Bite your tongue!
Seriously, in my younger days, I read plenty of movie novelizations--and I devoured the likes of Wells, Stapledon, Leiber, Sturgeon, Matheson, etc. This isn't a required reading list. Sometimes you want to read something complex and challening; sometimes you want to read a good novelization.
Or how about cases like “Star Trek Generations” where there are 2 very similar but different novelizations out there—-and I’m not talking an adult version and a kids version!Yep. That was certainly part of the appeal in the past, but apparently it wasn't the only reason people read novelizations since they're still selling and folks like JD still want to read them, thank goodness.
I guess there are still people who want to read their favorite movies. And who appreciate "bonus" material like scenes that didn't make the final cut of the movie.
Trivia: Movie novelizations date back to the silent era so they've been around for about a hundred years now,. As I understand it, they were originally serialized in magazines and newspapers before being compiled into books. Chances are, they'll outlive us all.
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