Star Trek Comics Weekly #136
It’s been a long road getting from there to here, but after a five-month hiatus, I’m finally back to writing this column. Up next: ST:TNG—Terra Incognita.
Rich Handley Author and Editor
It’s been a long road getting from there to here, but after a five-month hiatus, I’m finally back to writing this column. Up next: ST:TNG—Terra Incognita.
IDW’s Hive, written by Terry Matalas and Travis Fickett, was based on a story by Brannon Braga, and it celebrated The Next Generation’s 25th anniversary.
What if James T. Kirk failed to prevent the Federation President’s assassination in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country?
Scott and David Tipton established themselves as two of IDW’s most valuable players with the Star Trek license, so editor Andrew Steven Harris brought them back for ST:TNG: Intelligence Gathering.
This week’s column begins IDW’s expansive Star Trek tenure with its debut miniseries, 2007’s The Space Between, from David Tischman, Casey Maloney, and Stacie Ponder.
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 wraps up our DC discussion with Ill Wind and the two-part “Convergence” storyline, published in the sixth Star Trek and Next Generation Annuals.
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.
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’s column looks back at DC Comics’ Star Trek: The Next Generation—Shadowheart, as well as the DC-Malibu-produced Landmark Crossover.