Page Summary
- (Anonymous) - (no subject)
philrm - (no subject)
Active Entries
- 1: Five Stories About Time Travel and Bureaucracy
- 2: My first Beaverton piece
- 3: Books Received, May 17 — May 23
- 4: Five SFF Works About Meddling, Mystery-Solving Kids
- 5: Aunt Tigress by Emily Yu-Xuan Qin
- 6: The Judas Contract by Marv Wolfman & George Pérez
- 7: Five SFF Novels Featuring Tunnels
- 8: Well, crap
- 9: Bundle of Holding: Awfully Cheerful Engine
- 10: Candidate Planet Nine Found
Style Credit
- Style: Neutral Good for Practicality by
Expand Cut Tags
No cut tags
no subject
Date: 2022-06-19 01:40 pm (UTC)A manageable and only slightly embarrassing ailment, but if left untreated it can develop into Deglerism.
Jody Scott's I, Vampire would count... and would be enough of an extreme outlier to bring flavor to an essay.
no subject
Date: 2022-06-19 05:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-06-19 07:58 pm (UTC)The Enterprise slash the Mirror of Venus.
no subject
Date: 2022-06-20 04:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-06-20 06:38 pm (UTC)Rockets are just cooler looking than any "reactionless drive" (rocket equation be damned.)
On the topic of the Blish novelizations, I find it curious that they came out concurrently with the show and were often based on working scripts rather than the finished episodes, so there were often substantial differences beyond Blish using his imagination to flesh out details. The story titles also varied from the episode titles (I like "The Unreal McCoy" better than the show's "The Man Trap.") [1]
[1] https://flashbak.com/chilling-journey-worlds-beyond-imagination-remembering-james-blishs-star-trek-books-50994/
no subject
Date: 2022-06-21 02:58 am (UTC)My own theory is that Bama had pictures of the Enterprise miniature, but he (or some NBC person) decided that in portraying Captain Kirk's craft as it streaked over a planet, if it didn't spout at least three flames, nobody would know it was supposed to be a spaceship.
A slightly obsessive aficionado, one Mark Martinez-- may Roscoe always smile upon him!-- has devoted a considerable Web site to that single James Bama painting. Mr. Martinez rounds up likely reference photos used by Bama, chronicles the pictures appearances in ads, book covers, and magazines across the years, offers examples of tributes to Bama's composition by subsequent generations of Trek illustrators, and displays fan art.