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Ken Save

Auteur de Abraham Lincoln

30+ oeuvres 396 utilisateurs 2 critiques

Œuvres de Ken Save

Abraham Lincoln (1989) — Illustrateur — 165 exemplaires
The Gary Seven Collection (2009) — Illustrateur — 20 exemplaires
Kids' Bible Activities (2005) 14 exemplaires
Fun Bible Q & A for Kids (2010) 5 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Jim Elliot: Missionary Martyr (1995) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions811 exemplaires
Hudson Taylor (1993) — Illustrateur — 223 exemplaires
David Livingstone (1992) — Illustrateur — 218 exemplaires
Elijah: God's Fiery Prophet (1991) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions140 exemplaires
Samuel Morris (1995) — Illustrateur — 127 exemplaires
Miriam (1995) — Illustrateur — 108 exemplaires
Florence Nightingale (1997) — Illustrateur — 104 exemplaires
Christopher Columbus (1995) — Illustrateur — 96 exemplaires
Young Readers Christian Library: Peter (1994) — Illustrateur — 89 exemplaires
Billy Graham (1997) — Illustrateur — 78 exemplaires
Pollyanna [Retold by Colleen Reece] (1994) — Illustrateur — 42 exemplaires
Convergence (2007) — Illustrateur — 13 exemplaires

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Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

As always, I have a beef with IDW's entire collecting strategy. Once again, the Star Trek Archives decided to focus their energy on what had been reprinted before, when so many Star Trek comics have never been reprinted at all. The first story arc here had been reprinted in DC's Revisitations, which you can track down for about $10 on the secondary market; the second story was reprinted just two years earlier by Titan in their Star Trek Comics Classics line! Like, why bother?

And as always, the books themselves are shoddy. The title of this according to the title page is "The Gary Seven Collection"; all of the other Star Trek Archives have titles that begin "Best of...", and this one's cover thus calls it "Best of The Gary Seven Collection," I think because someone forgot to take "Best of" off. Ouch. The credits opposite the copyright page contain multiple errors, giving inkers credits on issues they did not work on, Howard Weinstein an unwarranted plot credit, and misnumbering an issue. And the indicia gets the issues wrong, claiming the included comics are reprinted from Star Trek: The Peacekeeper #49-50, Star Trek: Convergence #6, and Star Trek: The Next Generation: Convergence #6, when in fact they are reprinted from Star Trek vol. 2 #49-50, Star Trek Annual vol. 2 #6, and Star Trek: The Next Generation Annual #6.

But what of the actual stories? I have a fondness for Gary Seven; I think he's the kind of fun whimsy that can exist at the fringes of the Star Trek universe. John Byrne did a good job capturing this in his Assignment: Earth miniseries a few years back, with adventures plugged into the colorful highlights of the 1960s and 1970s.

These stories, though, don't really lean into that aspect of the character. The first story collected here, "The Peacekeeper," is a decent technological thriller about a superweapon, but a bigger part of the focus is the "Aegis" Gary works for, and few of his fellow agents who have gone rogue and are trying to strike back against their masters. I enjoyed the story, but wanted more Gary and more color.

The second, "Convergence," is utterly tedious. It has a great premise: someone is kidnapping people who are important to Federation/Romulan history from out of time: a Romulan general, Spock, Captain Harriman of the Enterprise-B, Data,* and Chancellor Gowron. This changes the timeline, and the crews of the Enterprise-A and Enterprise-D end up working at the same time to fix it, unknown to each other.

But nothing happens, even though both issues are double-length. The Romulan, Harriman, Spock, and Data just talk and talk and talk, even though such a collaboration could be awesome. The two Enterprise crews just wander around a foggy planet. History has changed in the Next Generation era thanks to the removal of Spock and Harriman from history, but even though we see Ambassador Sybok, he promptly vanishes from the story before anything can be done with him. I'm sure this story had some limitations, but the novel Federation came out around the same time and managed to make the two Enterprise crews not meeting into an epic event regardless. This is a damp squib, and again, barely makes use of what makes Gary Seven a fun character.

(And the whole collection has no Roberta Lincoln at all! At least Isis turns up.)

I read these where they take place, between the comics adaptations of Final Frontier and Undiscovered Country. What I hadn't realized before reading is that they were written later. Admiral Cartwright shows up in "The Peacekeeper," with a slightly sinister agenda, and Harriman's appearance in "Convergence" was a total surprise. Two bits of nice retro-foreshadowing. I also liked that Saavik was brought back as the Enterprise-A's helm officer following the departure of Sulu for his own command on Excelsior.

* Of course, these comics were written fifteen years before, but you could take this as foreshadowing Nemesis if you wanted.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Stevil2001 | 1 autre critique | Oct 26, 2019 |
Never liked G7 or annoying ST time-travel stories.
 
Signalé
morbusiff | 1 autre critique | Sep 20, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
30
Aussi par
12
Membres
396
Popularité
#61,231
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
2
ISBN
41

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