Star Trek Comics Weekly #50
This week, the 50th installment of this column fittingly celebrates a landmark event: Marvel Comics’ return to the fold following a fourteen-year absence.
Rich Handley Author and Editor
This week, the 50th installment of this column fittingly celebrates a landmark event: Marvel Comics’ return to the fold following a fourteen-year absence.
This week, our examination of Malibu Comics’ DS9 line concludes with a discussion of how issues #29–32 provided prequels, sequels, and tie-ins to onscreen lore.
This week wraps up our DC discussion with Ill Wind and the two-part “Convergence” storyline, published in the sixth Star Trek and Next Generation Annuals.
This week’s column explores Malibu Comics’ Deep Space Nine Ultimate Annual, Worf Special, and Celebrity Series one-shots.
Let’s examine how DC’s Star Trek: The Next Generation #76–80, as well as its third The Next Generation Special, presented prequels, sequels, and tie-ins to onscreen Star Trek.
This week, we’ll revisit Malibu Comics’ Spectacular 64-Page Annual #1, as well as Lightstorm #1, Terok Nor #0, and Deep Space Nine Special #1.
Kevin J. Ryan was DC Comics’ final writer on Star Trek. His last five issues, #76–80, demonstrated his knack for writing thought-provoking fiction, and for mining episodes and films to create something new and familiar.
DC Comics’ ST:TNG #71–75 presented “War and Madness,” the first DC tale set in the period after The Next Generation’s seventh season but before Generations.
This week, we interrupt our chronological exploration of five decades’ worth of Star Trek comic books and return once more to the era of bell-bottom trousers and lava lamps. It’s time for another look at Trek comics produced outside the United States.
Malibu Comics’ later DS9 issues were among its best, with issues #21–28 offering a range of stories featuring prequels, sequels, and tie-ins to onscreen Star Trek.