Table of Contents for Boarding the Enterprise
The table of contents for Boarding the Enterprise: Transporters, Tribbles and the Vulcan Death Grip in Gene Roddenberry’s Star Trek edited by David Gerrold and Robert J. Sawyer, coming in August 2006 from BenBella Books:
Introduction
Welcome Aboard the Enterprise
Robert J. Sawyer
Foreword
The Trouble With Trek
David Gerrold
Star Trek in the Real World
Norman Spinrad
I Remember Star Trek . . .
D. C. Fontana
All Our Tomorrows
Allen Steele
The Prime Question
Eric Greene
We Find the One Quite Adequate
Michael Burstein
Who Am I?: Personal Identity in the Original Star Trek
Lyle Zynda
What Have You Done With Spock’s Brain?!?
Don DeBrandt
Lost Secrets of Pre-War Human Technology
Lawrence Watt-Evans
Exaggerate with Extreme Prejudice
Robert A. Metzger
To Boldly Teach What No One Has Taught Before
David DeGraff
Who Killed the Space Race?
Adam Roberts
Alexander for the Modern Age
Melissa Dickinson
How Star Trek Liberated Television
Paul Levinson
Being Better
Howard Weinstein
6 Comments:
As a young Trek fan under the age of ten, Weinstein's THE COVENENANT OF THE CROWN was the first Trek fiction I tried to read. It blew my mind that something on the screen could be transferred to the page. I found an old paperback copy of COVENANT here in the Philippines a few weeks ago, and it instantly took me back to that (more innocent) childhood time when there was no debate (for me) between old Trek versus new Trek, movies versus books, authorized stories versus out-of-continuity stories. There was only the magical possibilities inherent in a tale featuring heroes I'd only seen previously on a silver screen, but who now could inhabit my own imagination. As a kid, anything Trek was cool by me; it was all variations on the same theme, scored to the beat of different mediums.
I'm looking forward to this. I like that there is no theme (beyond the loose Trek framework, obviously), and the ToC is certainly impressive.
We'll bet it fixed, Michael. Sorry about that! (I didn't prepare the Table of Contents text, although I did work out the order of the essays.) I've notified Leah at BenBella to make the change.
Only in a few cases, Lou. Most of them are about STAR TREK's impact on society.
In fact, here's the rationale for the sequence:
Sawyer introduction
Gerrold analyzing the series
Spinrad analyzing the series
Fontana on her memories
Steele on writers [following three essays by writers]
Greene on race relations [thematic analysis]
Burstein on religion [thematic analysis]
Zynda on personal identity [thematic analysis]
DeBrandt on Vulcans [major elements]
Watt-Evans on the creaky technology [major elements]
Metzger on Scotty [major elements]
DeGraff on astronomy [following tech and Scotty]
Roberts on the Space Race [following astronomy]
Dickinson on fan fiction [life after first-run]
Levinson on syndication [life after first-run]
Weinstein analyzing the series [a fitting wrap up]
Well, besides the Introduction to the whole book, I also wrote 16 mini-introductions to each of the essays ... :) But you're right, Lou, I do love Classic Trke!
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home