Star Trek Comics Weekly #105
IDW’s Star Trek: Khan miniseries ambitiously set out to explain the different appearances and accents of Khan Noonien Singh. Did it succeed?
Rich Handley Author and Editor
IDW’s Star Trek: Khan miniseries ambitiously set out to explain the different appearances and accents of Khan Noonien Singh. Did it succeed?
In 2014, I contributed to my first of many books for Sequart. it was titled New Life and New Civilizations: Exploring Star Trek Comics, and it was edited by my friend Joseph F. Berenato.
For this week’s column, I examine issues #24-28 of IDW’s ongoing Star Trek title, featuring Romulans, Klingons and Gorns–oh, my!
I’ll be highlighting books I’ve worked on throughout my career, with a new one posted every Thursday. First up: Watching Time: The Unauthorized Watchmen Chronology.
IDW’s Countdown to Darkness and After Darkness provided bookends to Star Trek Into Darkness. Written by Mike Johnson, both were illustrated by David Messina and Marina Castelvetro.
This week, I examine IDW’s Star Trek/Doctor Who—Assimilation2, which brought back Scott and David Tipton, accompanied by co-author Tony Lee and artists J.K. Woodward and Gordon Purcell.
IDW’s Star Trek issues #7–13 not only provided tie-ins to The Original Series and the Abrams films, but also reimagined a few classic episodes.
This week, I look back at the first six issues of IDW’s ongoing Star Trek title, which reimagined three classic TV episodes for the 2009 film cast.
IDW’s Infestation crossover teamed up Star Trek with Ghostbusters, G.I. Joe, Transformers, and more.
In IDW’s Leonard McCoy, Frontier Doctor, John Byrne explored what the good doctor had been up to since the end of The Original Series.