Search
Home
Mobile Site Caption Comp Monthly Poll Sudden Death Book Reviews Game Reviews Colour Key Statistics Cookie Usage
FED SHIPS OTHER A-K FLEETS WEAPONRY SPECIES PERSONNEL TIMELINE CALCULATOR GALLERIES TEMPORAL
STATIONS OTHER L-Z LINEAGE SIZE CHARTS BATTLES OTHER PEOPLE SCI-TECH STYLING POLITICS TEMP. SHIPS
ARTICLES REVIEWS LISTS RECREATION SEARCH SITE GUIDE WHAT'S NEW MAIL AUTHOR LINKS-AWARDS SHOPS FORUM

Federation
Air
Tram

Akira

Ambassador

Antares

Argo

Centaur

Challenger

Cheyenne

Constellation

Constitution

Daedalus

Danube

Defender

Defiant
Delta
Flyer

Excelsior

Federation

Freedom

Gage

Galaxy
Galaxy
Yacht

Griffin

Hermes
Holo
Ship

Intrepid

Kelvin

Miranda

Nebula
New
Orleans

Niagara

Norway

Nova

Oberth

Olympic
Orbital
Shuttle

Peregrine

Polaris

Prometheus

Ptolemy

Raider

Raven

Rigel

Saber

Saladin

Scout

Shelley

Sovereign
Sovereign
Yacht

Soyuz

Springfield

Steamrunner

Sydney

Trainer
Travel
Pod

Trident
Type 1
Shuttle
Type 3
Shuttle
Type 6
Shuttle
Type 7
Shuttle
Type 8
Shuttle
Type 9
Shuttle
Type 10
Shuttle
Type 11
Shuttle
Type 15
Shuttle
Type 18
Shuttle
Warp
Sled
Work
Bee

Yeager

Additional

All Books

Title : Lost Voyages of Trek and The Next Generation
Writers : Bill Planer
Year : 1992
Rating : 4.0000 for 1 reviewsAdd your own review
Reviewer : Niall Johnson Rating : 4
Review : The copy I have is credited to Edward Gross and Mark A. Altman, and its publishing date is 1995. Re-issue perhaps? British Version? God forbid Plaigarism? A fascinating look at shelved ideas. There are no actual scripts, but detailed synopses interspersed with dialogue extracts. Several of the stories are remarkable, the most interesting being "Blood and Fire" and "Blood and Ice" AIDS stories which suggest Regulan Bloodworms were biological weapons. Other stories were bad, and easy to see why they never made it to screen. Others still were wnating but had marvellous potential. The most obvious of these being the Star Trek II episode "The Child". There is even background to Star Trek VI: Starfleet Academy and the first draft of Generations. I would recommend this book to anyone with aspirations of writing for television and Star Trek as one can get a feel for what works and what doesn't. That being said, there are several stories here that would have beaten several aired episodes in terms of plot and story quality. Picking it up for IR£3.50 in '98 was sweet as well!
Add your own review

Copyright Graham Kennedy Page views : 1,773 Last updated : 1 Jan 1970