This
week at Flashbak, I also celebrated Star Trek’s upcoming 50th
birthday by looking back at Alan Dean Foster’s log books.
Here’s
a snippet and the url (http://flashbak.com/new-adventures-u-s-s-enterprise-crew-remembering-star-trek-log-books-60175/
)
“With
Star
Trek’s 50th anniversary coming this September 8th, I want to
shine a light on another literary chapter in the long-lived franchise.
From
1974-1978, award-winning author Alan Dean Foster novelized all the episodes of Star
Trek: The Animated Series (1973-1974) in ten Star Trek Log Books,
first published by Ballantine.
These
books were described as “more lively
adaptations from television’s most popular science fiction series” and when
the intrepid Foster began writing them, he was adapting three half-hour stories
per book.
But
starting with Log Book 8 and continuing through Log Book 10, the author was
adapting one story per book, meaning that he was spinning a full-length novel
out of a twenty-two minute script. This
was a Herculean task, but one which produce some great stories. The episodes given this “extended” treatment
were “Eye of the Beholder,” “Bem” and “The Slaver Weapon.”
The
Star
Trek Log Books sold originally for between $1.25 and $1.50 a piece, and
they arrived at a crucial time for fans hungry for more adventures set in their
favorite universe. The animated series
was long cancelled by 1975 and The Motion Picture would not arrive
until 1979. So -- along with James
Blish’s live-action episode adaptations -- Alan Dean Foster’s Log Books were
critical in keeping the series alive, current and fresh in the eyes of the fans.
Over
the years and decades, the Star Trek Log Books have been
republished by Del Rey and Pocket Books, but I am especially fond of the
original Ballantine Editions for the beautiful cover art. For the first several
Log Books, for example, there are wonderful alien vistas pictured. These covers
do a great job of showcasing the universe as Filmation’s animated series
imagined it. Log One adapts the story
“Yesteryear” and features an illustration of a metropolis on Vulcan, for
example…”
Please
continue reading at
Flashbak.
No comments:
Post a Comment