Author Ann Carol Crispin Has Died
She was not on the list.
StarTrek.com is saddened to report the passing of Ann C. Crispin, better known to millions of book aficionados as A.C. Crispin. Crispin, who died today, was the acclaimed, award-winning author of numerous books, including the iconic Star Trek titles Sarek, Yesterday’s Son and Time for Yesterday. Her non-Star Trek work included her own, original StarBridge series, as well as tie-in novels set in the realms of Star Wars, V, Alien and Pirates of the Caribbean. Crispin had waged a long battle with bladder cancer and, on September 3, she took to her Facebook page to thank her fans for their good wishes and prayers, but also to reveal that the end of the battle was near.
StarTrek.com spoke to Crispin in 2011 and asked her, among
other things, what she felt she added to the lore of Vulcans in general and to
Spock, Sarek and Zar specifically through the Trek novels and comic book she
wrote. She replied, “From the beginning I was fascinated -- pardon the pun --
by Mr. Spock and Vulcan. As a child of the 60’s, the idea that Vulcans were
strong, and capable, anything but wimps, yet their entire planet embraced
pacifism, really inspired me. Also, Mr. Spock was smart, and I identified with
his intelligence, yet (also) his “apartness.” He was a character pulled between
worlds… this is a characterization a writer can really sink her teeth into! So
I worked very hard at being able to set inside the skin of my Vulcan
characters, and write them in a way that was true to their nature, yet made
them understandable and allowed readers to empathize with them. I also loved
Mr. Roddenberry’s optimistic vision of the future. I wanted to go live in that
future, and I was able to, at least for as long as it took to write my novels.
As for Zar, it seemed to me when I watched “All Our Yesterdays” that the
episode cried out for a sequel… so I sat down and wrote it. Regarding adding
Trek “lore”… I suppose I was able to add a bit. I recall inventing a rather
nasty weapon from the time of Surak that Romulans still used for Sarek… a
senapa, I believe it was called. That was fun.”
Crispin, who was in her early 60s, is survived by her
husband, the author Michael Capobianco, and a son from a previous relationship.
All of us at StarTrek.com extend our condolences to Crispin’s family, friends
and many admirers.
Works
The Han Solo Trilogy
The Paradise Snare (1997), ISBN 0-553-57415-9
The Hutt Gambit (1997), ISBN 0-553-57416-7
Rebel Dawn (1997), ISBN 0-553-57417-5
Also available as Star Wars: The Han Solo Omnibus (2000)
Star Wars short stories
"Play It Again, Figrin D'an" (in Tales from the
Mos Eisley Cantina, 1995)
"Skin Deep" (in Tales from Jabba's Palace, 1996)
StarBridge novel series
StarBridge (1989)
Silent Dances (1990) (with Kathleen O'Malley)
Shadow World (1991) (with Jannean Elliott)
Serpent's Gift (1992) (with Deborah A. Marshall)
Silent Songs (1994) (with Kathleen O'Malley)
Ancestor's World (1996) (with T. Jackson King)
Voices of Chaos (1998) (with Ru Emerson)
Star Trek
Yesterday's Son (1983)
Time for Yesterday (1988)
The Eyes of the Beholders (1990)
Sarek (1994)
Star Trek: Enter the Wolves (2001) (with Howard Weinstein)
WildStorm Comics
Sand and Stars: Signature Edition (2004)
Witch World
Gryphon's Eyrie (1984) (with Andre Norton)
Songsmith (1992) (with Andre Norton)
V
V (1984)
V: East Coast Crisis (1984) (with Howard Weinstein)
V: Death Tide (1984) (with Deborah A. Marshall)
The Exiles of Boq’urain
Storms Of Destiny (2005)
Future projects: Exiles of Boq'urain Trilogy · Book 2 &
3
Miscellaneous
Sylvester (1985)
Alien Resurrection (1997) (with Kathleen O'Malley)
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom (2011)
No comments:
Post a Comment