Star Trek: The Newspaper Strips, Vol. 2: 1981 - 1983 Preview
Star Trek: The Newspaper Strips, Vol. 2: 1981 - 1983 Preview
Star Trek: The Newspaper Strips, Vol. 2: 1981 - 1983 Preview
IDW PUBLISHING
San Diego
Sharman DiVono, Ron Harris, Larry Niven, Padraic Shigetani, Martin Pasko, Gerry Conway, Bob Myers, Ernie Coln, Alfredo Alcala, and Dick Kulpa
Dean Mullaney
Bruce Canwell MARKETING DIRECTOR Beau Smith Rich Handley INTRODUCTION Jeff Vaughn DAILY STRIP RESTORATION Joseph Ketels
Special thanks to Ron Harris, Rosemary Ford, Martin Pasko, Padraic Shigetani, Mark Martinez, Allen Lane, and Rick Norwood. Additional thanks to Dick Kulpa, David Seidman, Justin Eisinger, Alonzo Simon, and Chris Ryall. ISBN: 978-1-61377-776-3 First Printing, September 2013
LibraryofAmericanComics.com
Published by: IDW Publishing, a Division of Idea and Design Works, LLC 5080 Santa Fe Street, San Diego, CA 92109 www.idwpublishing.com
Ted Adams, Chief Executive Officer/Publisher. Greg Goldstein, Chief Operating Officer/President. Robbie Robbins, EVP/Sr. Graphic Artist. Chris Ryall, Chief Creative Officer/Editor-in-Chief. Matthew Ruzicka, CPA, Chief Financial Officer. Alan Payne, VP of Sales. Dirk Wood, VP of Marketing. Lorelei Bunjes, VP of Digital Services.
Just a few days later, in the December 25 and 26 dailies (see page 31), Kirk is seen exhorting Kolak, his former Klingon rival, to fight off the Omniminds programming, and in turn the Omniminds programming is increased. This is not a 100% analog to the Borg as they would be later seen, but its close enough to be highly similar to the scenes between Captain Picard, Data, and the Borg Queen in Star Trek: First Contact. Speaking of the Borg Queen, check out the last panel of the January 9, 1982 daily (see page 36). The character, Lyra, is one of the good guys, a humanoid resistance fighter opposed to the Omnimind, but at first glance the similarity to the queen is striking (and that doesnt stop Kirk, naturally, from hitting on her). As the story moves toward its conclusion, Enterprise crew member Lt. Marsha Latham has been captured. She is replicated and the replica is turned into a host for the Omnimind. This echoes the Lt. Ilia drone from Star Trek: The Motion Picture and gives a foretaste of the Borg Queen a decade and a half before First Contact. The final element of this proto-Borg arc is the big reveal of the
Omniminds origin, what would pass for its true identity. Its probably the weakest element in the story, but its also the one with the richest possibilities. Fans have long speculated on the origin of the Borg, and this offers a glimpse of good intentions gone horribly awry, something thats easy to imagine having happened to the earliest versions of the Borg as they are later known. This, of course, is just one of the arcs in this volume. As writerproducer Mark Haynes (a veteran Star Trek fan, Star Trek strip art collector, and my co-writer on IDW Publishings 24 comics) put it, The Star Trek newspaper strip is probably as close as were ever going to get to the real feeling of what the second five-year mission or the illfated Star Trek: Phase II television series would have been like. Like the original series, there are some genuine clunkers and some average stories, but there are also some real gems, stories that if given the chance will stand the test of time.
J.C. Vaughn is Vice-President of Publishing for Gemstone Publishing. He was, he reluctantly admits, a pitching writer for the Star Trek: Voyager TV series.
Thomas Warkentins 1978 sample strips. (Courtesy his widow, Rosie Ford.)
by
RICH HANDLEY
Sample Strips (w/a: Thomas Warkentin) 1. The Enterprise intercepts a distress call from Morpheus II and discovers an ancient starship hulk. Watch for: a technical explanation of what constitutes a Class-M planet. 2. The Enterprise loses two crewmembers aboard a Klingon warship. Watch for: a visit from Elaan, the Dohlman of Elas, from the episode Elaan of Troyius. 3. Kirk and Spock retrieve a meson cylinder from the Suarians, with help from a shady pilot named Grey. Watch for: an early appearance by Doctor Wu, later featured in Warkentin's sixth storyline. Audition Strip (w/a: Dick Kulpa) (printed in Volume One) Kirk is intrigued when Spock reports that a new cartoonist is interested in working with the Enterprise crew. Watch for: the dropping of the comic strip's fourth wall. #11: Restructuring Is Futile (w: Sharman DiVono, a: Ron Harris, 10/26/81-2/28/82) Kirk finds a Klingon crew cyborged by a machine intelligence called the Omnimind. Watch for: assimilated biological lifeformsyears before The Next Generation's introduction of the Borg. #12: The Wristwatch Plantation (w: DiVono and Larry Niven, a: Harris, 3/1/82-7/17/82) Investigating the fate of a Bebebebeque colony on Mimit, the Enterprise faces Kzinti invaders. Watch for: a Surak-class shuttlecraft and a rare look at drug smuggling in Star Trek. #13: The Nogura Regatta (w: DiVono, a: Harris and Warkentin, 7/18/82-9/4/82) Kyoshi Nogura plans a starship race to honor his grandfather, Admiral Nogura, but pirates abduct several entrants. Watch for: a starship captain with more than a passing resemblance to Santa Claus. #14: A Merchants Loyalty (w: Padraic Shigetani, a: Shigetani, 9/5/82-10/30/82) Merchant fleets from the Deltan 330 Graveyard Sector stage a deadly rivalry to lure the Enterprise into their grasp. Watch for: the transition from The Motion Picture-era uniforms to those from The Wrath of Khan. NOTE: Martin Pasko has sometimes been erroneously cited as the writer of this storyline. However, Shigetani provided both the script and artwork for this tale, with Pasko writing only a single tale, #15. #15: Taking Shape (w: Martin Pasko, a: Shigetani, 11/1/82-2/12/83) The Enterprise crew is replaced by shape-shifters from Manark V, resulting in a showdown with Romulans. Watch for: Lieutenant T'Yee, a blonde Vulcan conceived after Paramount nixed plans to use Savvik. #16: Send in the Clones (w: Gerry Conway, a: Bob Myers, 2/14/83-5/7/83) To end a war with the Sangdor, Kirk receives help from Courier Clonesone of whom Scotty is accused of murdering. Watch for: an Engineering crewman in sunglasses, as well as plot similarities to Wolf in the Fold. #17: Goodbye to Spock (w: Conway, a: Ernie Coln, Alfredo Alcala and Serc Soc, 5/9/83-7/2/83) Stranded in the Fortenue System, Spock suffers amnesia and falls in love with a woman from a feudal society. Watch for: plot elements from the episodes All Our Yesterdays and This Side of Paradise. #18: Terminally Yours (w: Conway, a: Kulpa, 7/4/83-8/13/83) Contracting a plague, McCoy grows paranoid and steals a shuttlecraft so he can die alone. Watch for: a strong focus on friendship, as well as plot similarities to story arc #10. #19: The Retirement of Admiral Kirk (w: Conway, a: Kulpa, 8/15/83-10/15/83) Assigned to a desk job, Kirk resigns to pursue privateer work, but discovers he has signed aboard a slave ship. Watch for: the return of Admiral Yaramoto from arc #16, plus an alien engineer with a Scottish brogue. #20: Getting Real (w: Conway, a: Kulpa, 10/17/83-12/3/83) Kirk and company enter a parallel universe in which they are characters on a TV show called Star Trek. Watch for: references to the TV series, including posters, Trekkies and a Star Trek Lives t-shirt.
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