About this item
Highlights
- David Gerrold has written for STAR TREK, BABYLON 5, SLIDERS, and THE TWILIGHT ZONE, created LAND OF THE LOST for Sid & Marty Krofft, appeared on THE BIG BANG THEORY, and his Hugo and Nebula Award-winning story THE MARTIAN CHILD was turned into a major motion picture starring John Cusack and Amanda Peet, where he served as Executive Producer.
- Author(s): David Gerrold
- 368 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Short Stories (single author)
Description
Book Synopsis
David Gerrold has written for STAR TREK, BABYLON 5, SLIDERS, and THE TWILIGHT ZONE, created LAND OF THE LOST for Sid & Marty Krofft, appeared on THE BIG BANG THEORY, and his Hugo and Nebula Award-winning story THE MARTIAN CHILD was turned into a major motion picture starring John Cusack and Amanda Peet, where he served as Executive Producer.
And he still has many more stories to bring to a screen near you.
Here are a bunch of them.
- Bubble And Squeak
- The Thing In The Back Yard
- Death Game
- King Kong, Behind The Scenes
- Jumping Off The Planet
- Crystallization
- The Trouble With Hairy
...plus three extra stories!
- The Great Pan-American Airship Mystery (Or Why I Murdered Robert Benchley)
- Jacob In Manhattan
- The Last Case Of Sherlock Holmes
Review Quotes
From Library Journal
Hugo and Nebula Award-winning novelist and screenwriter Gerrold passionately discusses the challenges and excitement of writing sf. Creating believable new worlds in which to tell universal stories of conflict, growth, and transformation requires not only imagination but also the discipline to ask and answer tough questions. As in writing other genres of fiction, careful attention to setting, plot, character, and dialog must be observed, along with the mechanics of grammar, tense, sentence structure, and paragraph transition. But writing successful sf and fantasy, Gerrold contends, demands an even greater commitment to the integrity of language to create and define reality. In a chatty, informal, and even humorous style, he provides numerous exercises and questions, challenging the would-be writer to imagine the answers. Examples from films, novels, stories, and television supply practical evidence of his suggested techniques. Gerrold is a first-rate writer, best-known for his Star Trek writings. Given the rising popularity of sf, this book would be a welcome addition to any public library. Denise S. Sticha, Murrysville Community Lib., PA
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
The prolific Gerrold, creator of those beloved Star Trek nemeses, Tribbles, turns to the how-to-write book, which won't surprise Gerrold devotees, who know his cogent remarks on the craft from his books of ST commentary. How-to-write mavens won't be surprised, either, as Gerrold proffers a fairly standard set of the basics, though he does put his own characteristic and occasionally touchy-feely spin on each. Aspiring sf and fantasy writers will appreciate his clarity and lack of condescension and his exemplification from his own writing. Even at his most idiosyncratic, he is unlikely to lead beginners seriously astray.