I have a few of the Best of Trek books I found them at used book stores.I got one last year that was all about The wrath of Khan.
That would have been Volume 6 or Volume 7. For me, the best run of the series was volumes 6 through 10, which happens to be is when I discovered the series. (Volume 9 was the first one I bought. I found it in a bookstore near the Methodist Church I attended when I was small.)I have a few of the Best of Trek books I found them at used book stores.I got one last year that was all about The wrath of Khan.
Similarly, I feel the loyalty to TOS amongst the writers in The Best of Trek meant that TNG didn't get as thorough (or as fair) an analysis as it might've gotten if the volumes had lasted longer and incorporated the perspective of fans for whom TNG was their entry point.The volumes after that, especially when they got into Next Gen, didn't have as interesting content, imho.
My other early experiences with fandom were in the letters pages of the Star Trek comic...
my best friend (also a Trek fan) and I got a lot of mileage out of the jokes in that same volume, as well.
Robert's a great guy. He and I both write for BACK ISSUE magazine from TwoMorrows Publishing (just nominated for an Eisner Award!) and he's been nothing but generous with me when it comes to sharing memories and information about his time at DC Comics. He's got a Sherlock Holmes novel he's co-written coming up in the near future.One if the highlights of my January 1992 visit to NYC was dropping into the DC Comics' offices and interviewing Robert Greenberger.
One if the highlights of my January 1992 visit to NYC was dropping into the DC Comics' offices and interviewing Robert Greenberger. The team had just received permission to reintroduce the Robin Curtis version of Saavik into the post-ST VI issues.
Here's a listing for it, for folks like me who were intrigued by that reference. I have been meaning to pick up more than one title in this series, just haven't made the time to do so yet; they all look like a lot of fun.... http://titanbooks.com/the-further-adventures-of-sherlock-holmes-murder-at-sorrows-crown-7959/He's got a Sherlock Holmes novel he's co-written coming up in the near future.
Oh, yes! By all means! (And her article had funnier stuff in it than the follow-up Irwin and Love pulled together as a "sequel," too!)Ha, yes, Volume 7. Just saw your post and will pass on your compliment to Valerie!
Thanks for posting the link, Bibliomike! I couldn't recall the title when I was posting before.Here's a listing for it, for folks like me who were intrigued by that reference. I have been meaning to pick up more than one title in this series, just haven't made the time to do so yet; they all look like a lot of fun.... http://titanbooks.com/the-further-adventures-of-sherlock-holmes-murder-at-sorrows-crown-7959/
That's become a major pet peeve of mine in the various fandoms I'm involved with, the fan who gets SO into their own personal vision of a thing that they start presenting their opinions and personal fan theories as incontrovertible facts. I'm prey to it as well (heck, we all are to some degree), but I try to be as aware of it as possible and remember that my opinions are largely nothing more than that -- my opinions.One of the later issues has a nitpicky article ripping Diane Duane's Spock's World to shreds, which had my blood pressure rising thanks to complaints like the stardates being wrong because they don't conform to the author's personal interpretation of how stardates should work. Trek fandom hasn't changed a bit!
I also loved reading the fanrage against Wrath of Khan. It's amazing how similar complaints about that film mirror those in 2013 about Star Trek Into Darkness. One of the later issues has a nitpicky article ripping Diane Duane's Spock's World to shreds, which had my blood pressure rising thanks to complaints like the stardates being wrong because they don't conform to the author's personal interpretation of how stardates should work. Trek fandom hasn't changed a bit!
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