Monday, September 25, 2017

I don't h8 the 90's anymore (Part 6).


Aaand here we go, 90's novels.
Cuz even though geek culture struggled on TV, it prospered pretty well in print.
If you were a nerd, or a geek, or whatever your term of preference, the bookstore had somethin' for ya.
And now, 20-something years later, all that furious typing by the authors, and wasted allowances of fans is paying off.
Let's get right to it.


Sci-Fi-

Jurassic Park (1990) 


See here for "Jurassic World", and my links to other Jurassic Park stuff.

See here for my updated "Jurassic Park", movie review.

See here and here where Billdude and I discuss Crichton being a climate denier, and an asshole.

See here for what a petty vindictive sack of shit Crichton could be.

Before science denial and a need to be politically incorrect just for the sake of it scrambled his brains, he was a genuine talent, and this was his crown jewel.
Let's try to remember him this way.
It's more charity than HE deserves...but WE deserve it.


Mostly Harmless (1992)


Old review here.

The last book of the Hichhiker's Guide series.
*Wavey hand* eehh.
But, it got me re-interested enough to get the leather-bound quintilogy set.
And that's a treasure.

And, having this one in the old linked 90's section was the inspiration for this novel section at all.
I looked around my room, and thought "that's 90's, that's 90's, that's 90's, shit, I should do a blog chunk on this stuff!".

So, here we are.
Hope ya like it.


The Star Wars Expanded Universe (1991-2014)
(Although, it retroactively absorbed everything going back to '78)



Old reviews of Thrawn Trilogy, "Shadows Of The Empire", and "Dark Empire", here.

First book was "Heir To The Empire", last book was "Honor Among Thieves".
It had quite the run.
But at the end, it had to go.
Continuity and quality control was an absolute fucking mess.

In 2015, Disney swept it all away, but the books are still out there, but labeled "Legends".
Which is a cute way of saying "this all happens in Universe-B".

Now, all the new stuff going forward, movies, shows, novels, and comics are canon, and they have a guy whose sole job is keeping the timeline neat and tidy.

And, they're allowed to cherry-pick stuff out of Legends into new canon.
For example, Thrawn has been rebooted back to life into "Star Wars: Rebels", and a new origin novel by Timothy Zahn.

Here's hoping for Mara Jade (Luke's wife) someday.

I hung in there for quite a bit.
Right around the X-Wing series.
Those were pretty good.
Kind of the "Deep Space Nine", style spinoff of Star Wars.
But the mainline story about Han, Luke, & Leia started to jump the shark somewhere around "The Crystal Star", and "Children Of The Jedi".
Yeah, "Black Fleet Crisis", is when I finally bailed.
I couldn't take it anymore.

Timothy Zahn wrapped up Bantam's run of the books with "The Hand Of Thrawn", duology, and I have those, but never got around to reading them.
But I hear it was a brief return to greatness.
After that, Del-Rey got the books back, and did the whole Yuuzhan Vong saga, which I've heard praise of, and apparently, they tied all the loose plot threads from the Bantam run together in a cool way.
But, they also killed Chewbacca by crashing a moon into him, killed two out of three of Han & Leia's kids, and bumped off Mara Jade meaninglessly.
So..yeah...

As for the comics, the "Tales Of The Jedi", stuff started strong, but once Kevin J. Anderson totally took it over with no collaborator, it got shlocky.
Couldn't dig it anymore.
Although, the idea of holocrons got cherry-picked over to "Clone Wars", and "Rebels", so it has that legacy.

The graphic novel adaptations of the Thrawn trilogy are pretty awesome.
Those stand out.

The graphic novel adaptation of "Splinter Of The Mind's Eye", is beautiful (sort of an Elseworlds sequel to A New Hope).

The Archie Goodwin "Classic Star Wars", books (mentioned in the QVC chunk here) adapted from the 80's comic strips that fill the gap between A New Hope and Empire are neat.
And the style of ships predicts the prequel era.
So that's cool.

Had a lot of fun collecting and reading this stuff, but as I said up top, continuity and quality control got to be a mess, and it got harder to sift the good from the shit, and it was costing me a fortune, so I bailed out of the comics at "Golden Age Of The Sith", and settled in for the prequels, because they were supposed to be the big reward at the end of all this.
Turns out, it was "The Force Awakens", and I had a bit longer to wait.
Who knew?

Certainly not me, or I would have saved that money for Fangoria, Omni, Heavy Metal, Playboy, and Penthouse subscriptions.
Ah, what could have been.

Still, I had fun with these.
I have no regrets.


Star Trek novels 
(70's to present)
(But I collected 'em from 1990-1996)


Did em-

Prime Directive (1990)
Best Destiny (1992) (had a QVC special!!)
Q-Squared (1994)
Federation (1994)
Lost Years (1989-1995)
First Frontier (1995)
Crossover (1995)
The Ashes Of Eden (1995)
The Return (1996)
Invasion! (1996)

Didn't do em yet, but I'll fix that right now-

Metamorphosis (1990)
(Data gets turned into a human by a godlike entity. Magically forgets the experience in "Descent", "Generations", and "First Contact")

Q In Law (1991)
(Q meets Troi's mom. I wonder why they never actually did this. It would have been so easy)

Vendetta (1991)
(A sequel to "Best Of Both Worlds", before Voyager did it 50 times. A-plot: Starfleet pits the Borg versus a bigger meaner version of the Planet Killer from "The Doomsday Machine". B-plot: A prototype female Borg is a character, but can't handle her memories of assimilation, and kills herself. Because we apparently weren't ready or Seven Of Nine yet)

Imzadi (1992) (had a QVC special!!)
(The prequel story of how Riker met, fell in love with, fucked, and broke up with Troi before TNG. Fans acted like this was the all time arrival of Jesus Christ of Trek books. I just thought it was all right)

Dark Mirror (1994)
(Sequel to "Mirror, Mirror", before DS9 did it 50 times. Diverts from DS9's version of continuity wildly, so no longer canon. But, that just means it's an alternate-alternate universe. All I remember, is its got talking dolphins (via universal translator) before Seaquest DSV used the idea as a central thing. Hippies were obsessed with the notion that dolphins are geniuses in the 90's. Like, world's biggest problem solving geniuses. Sorry, hippies, they're a little smarter than dogs, but that's it)

Of course, this doesn't include the ones from the 70's and 80's that I caught up on in the 90's.
But, dammit, I gotta keep this as 90's as possible, or I'll be here forever.


Hulk: What Savage Beast (1995)


From Peter David, the author of "Imzadi", "Q-Squared", "Q In Law", "Vendetta", and guest star of many a QVC special.

For prior Peter David rants, see here for my ramble under "Savage Dragon vs Marshal Law".
Then see "Space Cases", here.
Then see "Hulk vs Pitt", "Darkness vs Hulk", and "Hulk vs Prime", here.
Finally, see my quick comment on '95 Iron Man here.

Peter David can be an abrasive personality, and he's written a lot of crap, but he's done some good too.
This was one of his high points in his Hulk tenure.
This, "Hulk: Future Imperfect", and "Hulk: The End".
And his whole run with Grey-Hulk with Todd McFarlane doing the art, which had the infamous bloody fight with Wolverine.

Anyway, back to this book, a lot of crazy shit happens in this one.
Hulk and Betty Ross have a baby, an evil parallel-future Hulk kidnaps the baby, Hulk goes on a quest through dimensions to get him back, hi-jinks ensue.
Along the way, the path is littered with Easter eggs and cameos, because Peter David is a fanboy on crack, meth, and steroids.

Stuff like this almost makes me forget how bad "Hulk vs Pitt", or "The Captains Daughter", or the ending of "Q-Squared", or the whole Pantheon arc of the Hulk comics were.
Almost.
Peter David is a controversial figure.
That's as nice as I can put it.
Arguing this guy's merits, or lack thereof, can cause actual bar fights.

But, to not acknowledge I enjoyed this book would to be a liar.
Had to toss it in there.


Red Dwarf: Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers (1989)
Red Dwarf: Better Than Life (1990)
(USA got 'em mid-90's)


See here and here for the show.

Basically, the first 2 seasons of the show, but with explicit detail, filthier language, fancier action pieces they didn't have the budget for in TV, and more character development with backstory, and internal monologues.

Fun stuff.
Worth a read.
Gotta admit, I enjoyed these more than "Mostly Harmless".

There's more books after these, but the two writers of the show split off, and did their own alternate timelines of what happens after "Better Than Life", so it's a confusing mess.
And you've gotta import them from the UK.
And they're not as good as when the two are a team.
Best to just stick to the first two.


Tekwar series (1989-1997)


See my comments on the show here.

I read up to "Teklab", I collected up to "Tek Secret".
I can only remember little specks of any of it.
By the time "Tek Power", rolled around, I was fully engrossed in Star Wars Extended Universe, and my spending dollar was spoken for.
If Tek-verse had been cooler, it would have kept me.

Police procedural stuff in a pseudo-Bladerunner skin doesn't do it for me as much as swash-buckling space opera.

Plus, in my adult years, I find the drug war to be immoral and corrupt, so I can't get behind fascist party-poopers against VR as "the good guys".

But, this must have still had its fans, it hung on until the "Star Wars Special Editions", came out.

The TV movies did up to "Tek Vengeance", then it spun into the regular series which went its own way.
As far as I can tell, the basic plots are there, but everything is cheaper.
The book descriptions paint...well, the world on the covers.
The chrome plated android on the cover of "Tekwar", and "Teklab", that's Winger, and in the show, he's just...some white guy.
No chrome.
The flying cars, are just cars.
The lazguns are just guns.
The sparkling Jetsons-y cities are just...Canada.
Everything was cheap like that.
Nowadays, HBO or Netflix would give it all the money in the world, and you'd end up with something like the "Westworld", reboot.

But, as said in the TV series review, this whole phenomenon blew away in the breeze.
People seemed outraged to discover his ghost-writer.
Really?
Really?
You really thought he wrote these?
Really??
Grow up, folks.
You know who could have gotten some help from a ghost-writer?
The "50 Shades", bitch.
That's what you get when you let unprofessional meat-heads write.
Know who used a ghost-writer, and you assholes didn't WANT to know until it was too late?
Donald Trump on "The Art Of The Deal".
Yeah, that was fake.
The only thing on Earth that made that dogfood-brain look smart, and it was a con.
Knowing that might have come in handy.
Might've saved some lives.
But the ghost-writer was scared to come out about it.
So, please, let's lose the self-righteous stigma over ghost-writers, for the literal good of humanity.
What say?
Hmm?

As for Shatner, when he really writes, he writes pro-Trump tweets, so fuck him.
I don't feel bad about selling that Tek junk to a used bookstore now.
Kiss my rosey red ass under Filene's bay window.
*Double middle-fingers*


The TimeShips (1995)


Sequel to H.G. Wells's "The Time Machine", and one of the best things ever.

Picking up immediately after the original, the time traveler from "The Time Machine", bounces around the timeline creating alternate histories, including one where Earth is surrounded by a Dyson Sphere inhabited by good-guy Morlocks, one with an alternate World War I that's more like World War III (as predicted by Wells) and finally, one where humanity has evolved into sentient intelligent nanotech goo, and they copy the tech of the Time Machine, and build/grow a fleet of Timeships to explore quantum reality.

Needs to be a Netflix show fucking yesterday!

Steve Baxter also just this year came out with a sequel to "War Of The Worlds", called "The Massacre Of Mankind".
I gotta check that out.

Its been 22 years, I'd like to see Baxter roll up his sleeves for Time Machine 3.


War Of The Worlds: Global Dispatches (1996)


Speaking of "War Of The Worlds", sequels!
An anthology of stories that posits "what if 'The War Of The Worlds', happened for real, and historical figures alive at the time wrote their accounts of the war?".

Really fucking cool.
The Teddy Roosevelt and Albert Einstein ones were my favorites, but they're all good.
Another one I could stand to see adapted into a movie or show.

Doesn't conflict with Baxter's sequel, because it happens concurrently with the first "War Of The Worlds".


Robots In Time (1993-1994)


I bought these, but never read them through.
Gotta do that someday.

Its not by Asimov, he had died, but somehow his estate authorized other people playing in his universe.

I liked the premise of it.
A liquid metal robot who's plugged into a city as its central computer goes rogue, realizes humans will be out to shut him down, so splits himself into 6 smaller robots, and they rig the shrinking machine from "Fantastic Voyage", into a time porthole, and send themselves into 6 different time periods shrunken to microscopic size so no one will ever find them, and they'll stay out of the way of history.

But shrinking and time traveling at the same time causes a quantum-something-or-other, and the tiny robots turn into nuclear explosions that scramble history, so scientists have to go back in time with the help of a good liquid robot to find, capture, bring home, reassemble, and reprogram the rogue liquid robot.

The time periods are dinosaur times, pirate times, ancient Rome, WWII, ancient China, and the time King Arthur would have lived, but some real historical guy turns out to be the inspiration for Arthur.

Sounds fun, didn't read 'em for some reason.
Gotta dig 'em out.

I mean, if you liked Data meeting Mark Twain, you get it 6 times over here.
What's my hold up?

It did inspire me to write a parody called "Robots in Hell".
Never got around to writing it.
Tried to bring it back as a chapter in Jade-Shade, but I bailed on that too.
Damn my lazy ass.
Second I'm done writing this paragraph, I'm digging these books out.
Edit-Done!


Fantasy-

Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (1997)
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (1998)
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (1999)


Review of the movies here.

I remember seeing these covers walking through the bookstore, but I had no fucking idea.
It wasn't until "Goblet Of Fire", was treated like a Star Wars movie release with people camping out at the stores that it got on my radar.

Even then, I still had no fucking idea what was in store with the movies, and the merchandise, and the theme parks.
So, I actually spent the 90's oblivious to this world, but it still came into existence here.

June 26th was the 20th anniversary of the first book.
Forgot to do something for that.
Ah, well, I mention it now.

The rest, I guess, is in my review of the movies.
I got pretty satisfyingly detailed there.


A Game Of Thrones (1996)
A Clash Of Kings (1999)


Quickie review of the show here.
Wow, it was only up to season 4 at the time.
Now next year is the final season 8.
7 seasons is way more to catch up to, but I still recommend it.

For the books, I had even less of an idea than I did with Harry Potter.

At least the Harry Potter books had characters in action poses.
These covers tell me nothing, and do nothing to stand out from a million other fantasy books that were out at the time.
I don't know how they caught on so well, and got out to the front of the pack.
I didn't have any hipster in-the-know- friends to tell me about these.
If I did know someone who read them, they kept it a secret to spite me.
I had nothing to clue me in to how much these were going to set off a nuclear bomb in our popular culture.
Nothing.
Totally caught me with my pants down.
But, I guess I'd rather it be something good like Thrones, than a volcano turning me to ash while I jerk off like that guy at Pompeii.


Chronicles of the Shadow War (1995-2000) 


"Shadow Moon", "Shadow Dawn", and "Shadow Star".
Sequels to Willow.

George Lucas (allegedly) wrote the outlines, Chris Claremont fleshed them out.
"Shadow Star", came really late, because Unca George had to do the prequels.

I bought the first two, read the first two pages of the first one, and put it down.
They fucking killed everyone I liked right at the beginning for chrissakes!
Fuck!
It's "Alien 3", all over again!

General overall plotline is, bad guys plunge the whole Willow world into war, and conquest, and sadness, and it's up to a teenage-to-grownup version of the baby from the movie, Elora Danan, to save the world.

I assume that's her on the cover of "Shadow Star".
She's hatching dragon eggs, so I guess she basically grows up into Daenerys Targaryen.
So, yeah, just watch/read Thrones.
Becoming a Thrones fan fixes so many problems.


Wizard's First Rule (1994)
Stone Of Tears (1995)
Blood Of The Fold (1996)
Temple Of The Winds (1997)
Soul Of The Fire (1999)


I only have the first three.
Hence the graphic.

Now, if you asked me back then, I would have assumed THESE would become Game Of Thrones.
It's fantasy, it's raunchy and gory, and there's lots of it.
And the author pounds it out 1000 times faster than George R.R. Martin ever will.
He's a jack rabbit on crack.

Shows what I know.
They did do a show of it called "Legend Of The Seeker", but it was regular-ass G-rated TV, was cheaper than Xena, and fell flat on its face ratings wise.
Its only cultural residue was as parody fodder for Krod Mandoon.

Poor Sword Of Truth.
Poor little guy.
My heart breaks.


Tehanu (1990) 


Part 4 of the Earthsea series.
The prior entries being "A Wizard of Earthsea", "The Tombs of Atuan", and "The Farthest Shore".

All of which came out from 1968 to 1972.
I didn't find out about them until 1989 at Sweetser.
One of my few happy memories of the place.

No one told me, and news never managed to fall into my lap, that there was a fourth one.
Ditto that there was a fifth one "The Other Wind", in 2001.

I loved the rules for magic LeGuin came up with.
Basically, it's hacking the program of reality.
First, everything, even inanimate objects, has life-force in it, just in dead things it's dormant waiting to be woken up.
Second, everything has a True Name, its real name that if you call it, the person, animal, or object has to obey you.
So reciting these names is how spells work.
And reciting the name of a thing, some middle instructions, and the name of the thing you want it to become can make a thing change into another thing, like breadcrumbs into arrows, or water droplets in the air into ice.
The neat thing about this system, is you can retroactively apply it to other fantasy series, and it works just fine.

Anyhoo, the first three books are about the male wizard, Ged, and his rise from a child to an adult, and then into an old wizard.
4 and 5 are about the woman Tenar, who was introduced in "The Tombs Of Atuan".

Sci-Fi channel did a two part miniseries in 2004 called "Earthsea".
They had a blonde guy play Ged, who in the books is brown skinned, and black haired, and LeGuin called him "honkey Ged".
Also, the story was mutilated, and all wrong.

Then in 2006, Studio Ghibli did an anime adaptation called "Tales From Earthsea".
They got Ged's race right, ditto Tenar and Tehanu, but the story was all rearranged.
It's a neat little movie, but as an adaptation of the books, it's unrecognizable.

If they gave this Game Of Thrones money, and an executive producer who gives a shit, this could really be something.

Well, we've got the books.
And I've got catching up to do.


The Green Mile (1996)


My quickie review of the movie here.

I don't classify this story as horror.
Its got dark elements, because it's King, but it's not classical horror.
What else could you classify it as?
Drama?
Thriller?
The supernatural elements put it sort of in the fantasy camp.
Screw it, fantasy is as best as I can do with the categories I've got.

So, the big deal was how this came out as serial chunks over 6 months like comic book issues do.
It was a neat experiment, but a failed one.
A couple other authors tried it, but theirs flopped.
People were only willing to put up with that nonsense for King.
I bet Martin or Rowling could get away with it.

Rowlng totally could.
If she did an 8th Harry Potter, and milked it along as chapter books, Hell YEAH fans would line up for it.

As for the story of "Green Mile", I pretty much said it in the movie review.
It's all right, but I don't love it.
I'll watch it if it's on cable, but I don't go out of my way.


Horror-

American Psycho (1991)


See here, and here for the movie.
See here for the shitty movie sequel for shits and giggles.

Like being oblivious to Harry Potter and Thrones being impending nuclear bombs to our culture, the political bar room brawl this caused flew right over my head without even leaving a feeling of breeze in my hair.
Had no idea it was a thing.

I've listened to the audio book, and there's stuff that creeped me out, yeah, but....I don't get it.
I don't get why this caused a shit-storm.

I've watched every scrap of bonus material for the film, and I still don't get it.

Hell, I don't know why "A Catcher In The Rye", has caused residual shit-storms for decades.

I think it just boils down to that stupid over-sensitive people exist, and we're stuck having to deal with them.
Also, some of these stupid people want to feel smart and important, and feel they need to make a name for themselves off someone else's sweat.
Sadly, that's always going to be a thing too.
Until we finally make the corrective brain chips.

Anyway, long story short, this pissed off third-wave feminists, so hurry up and read it.


Tale Of The Body Thief (1992)
Memnoch The Devil (1995)


See here for my Anne Rice entry from the "Masters Of Horror", edition of Halloween.

Now the books...
Body Thief, Lestat body swaps with a guy who has the psychic power to swap souls, and temporarily becomes human again.
It was all right.

Memnoch, Lestat meets the devil, and we see the creation story from his point of view.
I loved the shit out of it until the end.
The end spoiled it.

These were all right, but the real meat and potatoes is the original trilogy "Interview With The Vampire", "The Vampire Lestat", and "Queen Of The Damned".
Stick to those.
IMHO.

I hated how Memnoch ended, so I haven't touched the other sequels and prequels.
And there have been many!

I just have to say, Anne, sweetie, pookie, snookums....just be atheist.
Just pull the trigger.
You keep "struggling with faith", and there's nothing to struggle against.
Catholics are child-fucking monsters that use collection plate money to live like kings.
Skeptics have known it for centuries.
Tom Paine knew it.
Mark Twain knew it.
Abe Lincoln knew it.
It's not a big mystery.
Your vampires are more moral than all these church assholes.
Forsake the church, go full goth witch, and be happy.
The books will get better, the fans will be happy, it will have nothing but good effects.
Trust me.


Freddy vs Jason: 
The Peter Biggs script (1995) 


See here to read the script!
See here for the 9th anniversary of FvJ where I discuss the Biggs draft.
See here for the 29th anniversary of ANOES where I discuss the link between the Biggs draft, and "FvJvA:Nightmare Warriors".
See here for my review of "Slash Of The Titans", which discusses all the drafts, including the Biggs draft.

The graphics above are the fan cover I made for my printout of the script, back when I thought that's all I was getting; and, of course "Slash Of The Titans".

Soooo, yeah, this script made me very happy.
I clearly wish I could dimension travel to a universe where this got made.


Biography- 


Private Parts (1993)
Miss America (1995)


My old drooling ramblings about the "Private Parts", book and movie here.
My updated assessment of the "Private Parts", movie here.
My review of his E! show here.

The first one was pretty good.
Especially since it had his candid biography in it that got converted into the movie.
That was good stuff.

Part 2 "Miss America", was just a paper version of the show with some wacky toilet humor comic strip skits tossed in.
And his candid vulnerability from the first book is gone, and he's in full persona mode which is kind of obnoxious.
Pretty mediocre.
I could've written better.
I have written better.

He was supposed to do Part 3 about the making of the movie, and even had it all written up on his computer, but then he went through his divorce, and remarried, and moved to Sirius, and joined "America's Got Talent", and there's just been so much water under the bridge now (22 years worth!),  there's no way it's gonna happen now.

My Howard Stern phase is long gone, so if Private Parts 3 came out right this second, I wouldn't give a shit.
But, as I said here in my entry on "TNT 100% Weird", the original was part of one of my happiest Christmas-es ever, so I've always got that memory.


Star Trek Memories (1993)
Star Trek Movie Memories (1994)


This is where the whole hate-on that the rest of the ST:TOS cast has for Shatner got exposed.

These I believe he wrote.
Even if he tape recorded everything, and had someone else type and edit.

Not as self-serving as you'd expect.
He's honest, but he cushions the blow on his faults as much as anyone would.

These are actually pretty good.
Even if you hate Shatner's guts, open your mind, and give these a look.

And if you want a more in-depth unbiased look into the production of Trek, there's always "Inside Star Trek", by Herbert F. Solow and Robert H. Justman.

But the Shatner books are a good way to dip your toes in if you're a newly minted Trekkie.


To The Stars (1994)
Beam me up, Scotty (1996)


Now, if you want biographies from Trek people that are better life stories, these are are it.
Scotty was a war hero, and Sulu grew up in an internment camp.
Pretty dramatic stuff!

And you get some Shatner hate.
Takei relishes in bashing the Shat-man, Doohan however devotes one quick paragraph, and then doesn't want to talk about it anymore.
He seemed to think life was too short, and he was right.
You'll note his was co-written by Peter David.
Yep, THAT Peter David.
You can add that to his "good stuff he did", column.

Takei has since become a superstar on social media, and done two sequels about that.

Doohan passed in 2005. :-(

There was also "Beyond Uhura: Star Trek and Other Memories", by Nichelle Nichols in 1994, and "Warped Factors: A Neurotic's Guide to the Universe", by Walter Koenig in 1998.
But, I forgot to buy those, so I can't comment on 'em.
I can only assume they're great though.


Back To The Batcave (1994)
Boy Wonder: My Life in Tights (1995)


Adam West was an excellent human being, so of course his autobiography was great.
Just wonderful.
I can't heap enough praise on it.
The definitive book on the Batman '66 series, as well as the story of a wonderful man.
Stupid Hollywood will never adapt it into a movie, so just go out and read it.

Burt Ward's book however.....is a 300 page Penthouse Forum letter.
What the actual fuck?
Is he trying to be Howard Stern?
I mean, even if his pornographic tales of nailing groupies are true, they're all anonymous, so none of it can be confirmed.
Not like he nailed Batgirl.
He wanted to though, but she shot him down.
Good for her!

Adam West retorted that "there's more baloney in that book than a delicatessen".

Definitely read the Adam West one.
Read the Burt Ward one if it turns up in the double-discount bin at the used bookstore, and you want to decide for yourself how true any of it is, and have a cheap laugh either way.


SF Resource-

Trek resource books


Here we go....*cracks knuckles, does neck rolls*

Starfleet Technical Manual 
(1991 (3rd edition) 1996 (4th edition))

Gives blueprints for the whole world of the TOS (original series) era.
Excellent.
If you're a blueprint geek like me, of course.

Star Trek The Next Generation Technical Manual (1991)

Every nut, bolt, and microchip of the TNG Enterprise D.
Excruciatingly detailed.
Mike Okuda did not fuck around.
Having it in book form is nice and handy, but I feel like with him as tech adviser for TNG, DS9, Voyager, and Enterprise, every scrap of this got pumped into the shows, so the show is the technical manual if you nitpick and memorize enough.
But, I'm an advanced Trekkie, I forget sometime what it's like to be a noob.
These books got me started.
You don't set out to be a Sheldon Cooper about this stuff, its just that by craving more, more, more, because the shows and movies take so long to come out, that you dig deeper, and deeper into the established canon, and after a few years, you become expert without even meaning to.

Star Trek The Next Generation Companion 
(1992 (1st edition) 1995 (second edition))

A TNG version of the compendium (see below).
I have the first edition, and I think it only goes up to like, season 5?
They did a third edition in '06, and I'm sure that one goes all the way up to Nemesis.

Star Trek Compendium (1993 (fourth edition))

Re-issue of the original series guide.
Covers the making of the show, and a detailed episode guide that includes the cartoons and movies.
My edition goes up to Voyage Home, the 90's one must have gone up to Undiscovered Country.
Dunno if they did one with Generations.
Would have been a fitting overlap.

Star Trek Chronology 
(1993 (1st edition) 1996 (2nd edition))

I have both.
Second edition takes it up to First Contact.
Where the shows and movies have mentions of ancient history, and time travel to ancient history, and time travelers from the distant future, the timeline is actually pretty tricky to keep.
Kudos to Mike Okuda for doing it.

This, the Encyclopedia, and the Concordance are all made obsolete by Memory Alpha in the internet age.
But, until the internet became itself, it was nice to have these to get me through the 90's while I waited for the library computer to become real.
Think about it, Wikipedia and Youtube actually do what the Trek computers did.
Trek invented Googling.
It coming full circle to Memory Alpha is only fitting.

Star Trek Encyclopedia 
(1993 (1st edition) 1997 (2nd edition) 1999 (3rd edition))

Pretty much Memory Alpha on paper (see above).

I have the first and second editions.
The third took it almost to the end of Voyager.
I flipped through it at the bookstore, it was the size of a phone book, cost 60 bucks, and the internet was gearing up by then.
I passed on it.
Now I wish I had it as a collector's item to go with the other two.

Star Trek Concordance (1995 (reissue))

Pretty much the Encyclopedia, but with only TOS, TAS (animated series) TOS movies, and crossover episodes of TNG/DS9 with TOS characters.
Goes up to Generations.
Voyager hadn't done "Flashback", yet.

Star Trek: Phase II The Lost Series (1997)

Production, episode guides, and a couple whole scripts for the abandoned series that was going to launch a Paramount Network before even Fox was a thing.

The first episode turned into "Star Trek: The Motion Picture", and some of the other scripts were later recycled into TNG episodes.

Paramount later DID get its network as UPN, which had Voyager and Enterprise.
Then CBS bought paramount, and turned UPN into CW, mashing it together with WB.
They note this at the end of the book, and use that to conjecture that Phase II and Paramount Network probably would have failed the same way, but faster, and that Trek might have never recovered from it.

Thankfully, Star Wars came along, and inspired them to do the first movie instead.
Turns out, you have George Lucas to accidentally thank for Trek's enduring legacy.


The Physics Of Star Trek (1995)
The Metaphysics Of Star Trek (1997)
The Biology Of Star Trek (1998)
The Computers Of Star Trek (1999)


I put these separately, because the ones above take it in-continuity, these look at it from the outside-in from a real world perspective to figure out how plausible the tech really is.

Physics-
Computers, yes, lasers, yes, transporter and warp, no fucking way.
Replicators (if it were a molecular-chemical nano-builder, not an atom smasher) maybe.
Force-fields...biiiiig maybe, but probably not.
Holodeck....as shown onscreen, no fucking way without force-fields and replicators.
With alternative substitutes? Absolutely. We're creeping up on it right now.

Metaphysics-
Just sets out assuming the tech is real, and tries to figure out if Data is alive, and if you are you out the end of the transporter.
Data? Yes, he's alive.
Transporter survival? Yes and no.
Yes, you're you, but you aren't you anymore in daily existence.
Every day, you blindly accept that the copy of your core software that boots up when you wake up is you, so may as well accept transporting retains your identity just as much.

Weird incidents of being split into two people, or fusing with a separate person, or having your age changed are also dealt with.

Got me started on my amateur explorations of philosophy.
Wish I'd taken it in school, I'd be so much further along.

Biology-
Some of the aliens are doable, the weirder ones, not so much.
Transporting, again, not just no, but fuck no.
And Trek should be way further along in controlling DNA, and regenerating tissue than they show.

Computers-
Sad to say, I don't own this one.
I included it just to balance out the graphic.


Star Wars resource books. 


All of it's obsolete thanks to Wookieepedia. 
Every scrap of it.
Fun while it lasted.


Hyperspace (1994)


Unlike "Physics Of Star Trek", doesn't tackle how possible the stuff is, just goes into raw theory.
Helped me wrap my head around the idea of higher and alternate dimensions with simple layman's language. Also tackles time travel stuff like causality loops.
If you're an aspiring SF writer, even if you're doing a comedy take like I do, this is a handy starter guide.

Cute factoid, this pops up being read by Jerry O'Connell in "Sliders".


Aaand, done!!
YES!!!

Next up, magazines, comics, and illustrated art books.
We're closing in on the end, I promise!


15 comments:

B. D. said...

"Jurassic Park" - Errr...well, you know I wasn't really ever that wild about the movie, but I have read some of his older books for contrast, and...well, the guy always does pretty much one thing: discussions of evolving technology and its impact on society mixed into violent thrillers about some system disrupted by an element that screws everything up. It's what he started out with (his debut, "The Andromeda Strain," is actually terrible) and he basically got his JP comeback by writing what is actually a rather generic book for him. It has almost no surprises in it, except that baby getting eaten by raptors at the beginning, which of course would never make it into Spielberg (older Spielberg, anyway--I think--"Jaws" has a horrible kid death in it, after all!) Hilariously, the next year saw him get in all sorts of PC trouble over an issue that is now 100 percent irrelevant--"Rising Sun," where he fretted in an utterly paranoid manner about the then-trendy issue of the Japanese taking over the world! Haw haw!!!

Douglas Adams - another guy I keep ignoring for the dumb reason that I feel like I'd have to read/see everything he ever did to understand him.

"They also killed Chewbacca by crashing a moon into him" - God, THERE'S a hilarious image!!!!
(Seriously, why do people give such a shit about Chewbacca?)

"Hippies were obsessed with dolphins in the 90s" - Good call!!! Yes, they were!!

Peter David - Well at least he doesn't have Dave Sim's problems!!!

Tekwar - He wrote THAT many of them? Shatner sure is a prolific guy!!! *rimshot*
Oh wait, you address the ghostwriter thing. Yeah, sort of like people pointing out "you really thought Milli Vanilli weren't some fake studio project?"

Wait, Shatner defended Trump?!?!....Christ....fucking celebrities...dumbasses...Billy Corgan did it too, but I guess everyone already hated him as a person.

War Of The Worlds Dispatches - sounds like a cool concept....

B. D. said...

GOT books - Took me until the "Red Wedding" to realize how many people were that addicted to this.

Chronicles of the Shadow War - LOL at how big George Lucas's name is...and right when he was going to become uncool, too.

"Tehanu" - I read "The Left Hand Of Darkness," from 1969, for a class, and that was pretty well worth it...

"Green Mile" - That's how they did stuff in the 19th century, well you probably knew that....serial publishing in magazines...

"American Psycho" - The controversy was mostly over the book, back in 1991...not the movie...well you know that....but it was also about accusing Ellis of being a spoiled rich brat who wasn't very talented, to some extent..."Catcher In The Rye," that one was accused of glorifying adolescent whininess so some people didn't want it taught in schools and then of course Christians had problems with the profanity and such.

I wanted to say that I'm sick of reading about Takei's boner for hating Shatner, but now you've told me Shatner likes Trump!
Get 'em, Takei!!!

Burt Ward book - YUCK, look at that cover, wouldn't be caught dead buying that! I'd rather buy Jim Carrey's fucking paintings than that!!!


Anonymous said...

The Willow sequels written by Claremont were the final nail in his coffin for me. Every stupid cliche of his writing is in those, every example of insanely clunky dialogue, every "body and soul" reference. Those books proved to me once and for all what a one-note hack Claremont is.
- Lanz

Diacanu said...



I'll get to the other stuff tomorrow, but HOLY SHIT!
More women have come out against Harry Knowles, and writers are quitting the site, Knowles is quitting the site, and Alamo Drafthouse is kicking him out.

It's a full implosion!

B. D. said...

The most publicity he's had in years, no doubt. Why couldn't this have happened in 2003?

Diacanu said...

BD-
Jurassic Park- I think he even said in an interview that another writer probably could have done it way better, but he was just the one that assembled the peices of that idea the right way, so he figured he may as well write it.

Douglas Adams- It's good stuff. You should check it out.

Shatner- Indeed. Fuck him with a bottle rocket.

American Psycho- Yeah, I know a lot of people who think he's just a lucky hack.

Burt Ward book- Yeah, sad to say I withstood the shame, and bought it. The gossip hens on TV were tongue clucking over the "scandalaous allegations", in it, but wouldn't elaborate, so I felt I had to read it.
Worst "allegation", is he says one night, Adam West watched him fuck his girlfriend while jerking off in the corner, crying, and saying "you're both so beautiful!".
Buuullshit!
The rest is him fucking groupies.
Oh, and stuff about the Batman show, but Adam West told it better.

Harry Knowles- I know, right? Shitty empires built by shitty people always hang on way too long. Good riddance. Glad I switched to Dark Horizons, and never looked back.

Lanz-
Claremont- Glad I didn't read any further then.
Every couple years I'm tempted to pick them up again, but you saved me the trouble.



B. D. said...

JP - I guess he's sort of a shameless guy then because people didn't much care about Crichton in the 80s - he released only two books (although I do feel that "Congo" and "Sphere"--the two of his that I read as a teenager--are actually among his better books, though "Sphere" has a godawful lame ending) in that decade, he worked on silly computer games that no one remembers, and he directed, I think, that terrible "Runaway" movie or whatever it was called that had Gene Simmons as the bad guy with the robot spiders. Used to play on HBO. Trust me, that thing ain't getting a reboot like "Westworld."

I didn't know until last year that he actually had pulp trash paperbacks published under the name "John Lange" prior to "The Andromeda Strain." He would have been 23-24, and maybe even still training to be a doctor, when he was writing those...I don't remember if he tried to cover them up once his stardom was restored by JP and "ER."

Bret Easton Ellis - The thing of it is, AP is his only really good book, IMO--and it's a book that I can't entirely fault the haters for disliking. Not because of people puking over the gory stuff (which is so overblown I can't take most of it seriously) but because it's an intentionally one-note postmodern book that just does one thing for 400 pages. And then of course there's no resolution because that's the point, Bateman is rich and will just keep getting away with everything. So you sort of get the impression that it wasn't that hard of a book for him to write. He wrote "Less Than Zero" in 1983-84 when he was 19, and it was a big hit when it was published and the term "brat pack" got coined (not just for those John Hughes people but for he, Jay McInerney and Tama Janowitz as hip young New York fiction writers) but while I'm tempted to forgive him since he was so young, LTZ was honestly a pretty crappy book, just a one note depiction of wasted rich kids in a hell of their own making. "The Rules Of Attraction" was somewhat better, and made for a surprisingly not-bad movie, but it's still not great. That leaves 1998's "Glamorama" which actually really IS a totally repulsive overblown joke about celebrity name-dropping crap and some totally shallow guy who gets caught up in a dumb murder plot and it's pointlessly metafictional and one-joke and hateful, and "Lunar Park" which was kind of his Stephen King metafictional type book but still not great. He's written a couple more recently but I didn't even go anywhere near them. So....while I'll always like the book and movie of AP, he doesn't really have a great track record!!

Harry Knowles - Who from that whole Web 1.0 era (let's say, 2002 or earlier) is even still around? Is Matt Drudge still a big deal somewhere? I'm coming up with a blank. Jeff Bezos? Thought most of those people were out of it by the time Jobs croaked and Mark Zuckerberg became a star.

So in other words, Burt Ward is basically the 60s equivalent of Dustin Diamond. Yick.

GOD THESE FUCKING CAPTCHAS ANNOY ME. THOSE FUCKING ONES WITH THE STREET SIGNS. I NEVER GET THEM RIGHT AT ALL AND I HAVE TO GO THROUGH FIVE OF THEM EVERY TIME FUCK IT KILL DIE BLEED.

Diacanu said...



Web 1.0- Drudge is still popular with conservative jackholes, but his 15 minutes in the mainstream are long over. Seanbaby writes for Cracked sometimes. Looking back, as often as he could be funny, he could be a trolling bullying jerk too. The segment of his site where he picks on an autistic guy who made a crappy anti-smoking cartoon springs to mind.
Yeah, good riddance to most of the Web 1.0 dicks.

The Dark Horizons guy was never mainstream famous, but he was there from the very beginning, and aside form being a teensy bit of a movie snob, he's a good guy.

There are a lot of 'em like that.
They're good guys, but you just never heard of them.


Diacanu said...



No, wait, Drew McWeeney, formerly Moriarty on AICN, is still hanging around like herpes with his own site.

He's got a personality worse than Josh Martin, but at least he wasn't groping waitresses and popcorn girls.

Diacanu said...



Oh, and agreed about the ending of "Sphere".
There was also kind of a weird anti-feminist thread running through that one.
I vaguely recall the lead female character being described as butchy, and pushy, and confrontational, and man-hating, but then at the end, she loses those qualities, and the hero suddenly finds her beautiful.
Fuck you, Crichton, you character out of "Mad Men".

A shame, otherwise, there were some neat ideas in there.
Hmmm, guess you could sum up his whole career with that sentence.

Diacanu said...


Also, this!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zp77iV8tNM

B. D. said...

I remember the female character in "Sphere," her name was Beth and she's a reminder that Crichton was never ever ever strong on characters--hell, the best in "Congo" is the freakin' ape. Yeah, she flips out and hates the guy Dustin Hoffman played in the cruddy movie after the sphere "gets her" or whatever it is and plays like, well, something from the 80s...she also tries to sleep with him. The guy who ended up being played by poor Samuel L. Jackson in the crap movie ends up getting pissed off at Hoffman because he's white, meanwhile. The ending of the book is of course just the heroes wishing away everything the sphere did, so that was lame.
Hey, you want to read a REALLY paranoid white-guy book, go read Tom Wolfe's "Back To Blood," or better yet, run the other way and never read it at all!!!

Crichton thought environmentalism was pretty stupid too, not just climate change but environmentalism in general, he simply thought that would amount to more people tampering with nature, he felt people couldn't....oh hell, you remember what he said, it's near the end of JP. Hell, it reminded me of a Crichton rant!!

Goatse, the first I heard of him was YOU ranting about accidentally accessing him at J's. I think I saved that rant and copied it to you on your old board. My roommate in 2003 changed my computer's background to Tubgirl.

Diacanu said...



In that Goatse remembrance video, one of the guys says "in my mind, Goatse, Tubgirl, Lemon Party, and all those other people hang out together".

It popped into my head, what if that's actually Tom Six's next movie?
Then I thought "no....something that perfect would never happen".


Diacanu said...


Crichton's anti-environmentalism stance-
I see this mindset crop up a lot. Anything done wrong-headedly, or in extremes can be bad, but that doesn't mean throw the baby out with the bath water. Not wanting to drink our own piss and shit with a mercury and lead chaser isn't fucking "just more meddling", it's fixing a fucking error, because we don't want to fucking die before our time.
What, are we supposed to wait until we evolve into mutants that can double-metabolize shit?

Third-wave college feminists can be authoritarian speech censoring assholes, but that doesn't mean chain women back in the kitchen, and vote Trump.

There are black people who commit crime, but that doesn't mean all black people deserve SWAT team beat downs, and lose their right to protest the SWAT team beat downs.

It's fucking on/off all-or-nothing with these fucking people.
And it's in every fucking topic.

Human beings aren't the velociraptors, you get to tell them "hey, knock it the fuck off", and if they don't, you can call the cops, and if the cops are dirty, you protest, and if they start shooting protesters, then revolution, and start over.
But you exhaust every legal avenue before you get to that point.
That's how civilization works.
If Crichton didn't like that, he could go out into the woods, and be Grizzly Adams.
But he seemed to like being a rich author just fine.

That's another thing that's pissing me off this decade, is people that want to tear down what makes society work, like science, but like the goodies they get from that, like I-phones, and laptops to bitch on, and to spin conspiracy bullshit on, and put on Youtube.
Or that hate Obamacare, but are on Obamacare.
Or that hate blue states, and "welfare queens", but live in states that are welfare queens off of the blue states.

They love the goodies, but they want to burn down the goodie factory.
That was Crichton all over.
To the literal end.


B. D. said...

Well you know who started all that....Ayn Rand, hero to libertarian supermen everywhere, ended her life on social security...heh, Mother Teresa didn't exactly die poor either (well, Hitchens probably alerted you years ago about her.)

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