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  • Priscilla Presley (1984)

    Jennie Kim

    Sad that still true.

    ourCuteTechTeam

    Hayley Atwell

    ‘Grow Up’ [OC]

    meirl

    Aly Raisman

    rainbow skull

    Meirl

  • Carrie Fisher (1981)

    Blursed_Coincidence

    Meirl

    Cockpit by Sung Choi

    Kiernan Shipka

    Just tell me

    Shakira Mebarak

    San Diego, California

    Tehran, Iran

    Phnom Phen

    New Star Trek Book: “Take the Fall”

    Take the Fall by has been added to the Star Trek Book Club!

    Take the Fall is an autobiographical watercolor adventure deep into the psyche of anxious career comic book artist Tess Fowler Gutierrez after she discovers she has breast cancer and a high risk genetic mutation. What happens when you find yourself trapped in your body with blooming cancer tumors and ghosts from the past who want you dead? You make a comic about it.

    Buy it on her site!

    Gemma Arterton

    Motorcycle

    Gotta have heart

    Farrah Fawcett (1976)

    Jenna Ortega

    Stealing our Data

    TrekLit Connection: Deep Space Spines

    TrekLit Connections is a series of columns from authors, artists, fans, and publishers in which I give them space to tell you in their own words why they’re so deeply involved in TrekLit. My goal is be able to have at least one of these up a month and would love to hear from you if you’d like to talk about your own TrekLit Connections, find the FAQ page on how to contact!

    This time we’re hearing from J.W. Eubanks, author of my personal favorite reading of the entire Star Trek chronology at Deep Space Spines. Every post is witty and has cutting insights into the best and the worst that Treklit has to offer. You can find him on Blue Sky!


    Life has a functionally infinite number of branching paths. The culture(s) we’re surrounded by, the decisions we make, and our individual personality quirks can bring their formidable combined powers to bear on leading us down some very peculiar roads. Sometimes, you might even end up on one that makes you think it would be a good idea to critically assess every Pocket Books Star Trek novel ever written in the order in which they were published. (more…)

    Captain Justice

    I ran into this two issue mini series from Marvel during one of my journeys through my local comic shop’s dollar bins. It’s an adaptation of the first episode of “Once A Hero” an ABC series that lasted just a single season and is unavailable to stream anywhere that I know of and there are no vhs nor DVDs of it out there. I did find some hilariously bad transfers on youtube, so I did get to watch a small amount of it. The show has some obvious inspirations, the suit is extremely evocative of “The Greatest American Hero” and the premise is one that’s been around as long as people have been writing stories. The comics are much much better than they have any right to be, and handle the topic is more maturity than I would have expected from a tv series adaptation from Marvel.

    There’s also a fun gimmick in which Stan Lee writes a small blurb about how Captain Justice was a favorite comic of his back in the 50’s, but that’s all part of the smoke and mirrors of it. He later repeated that same gimmick when The Sentry was brought out of retirement to be written for the first time in the 90’s, so now I wonder how often they went back to that particular well.

    Here’s the main theme and title sequence for the show, I’d love to be able to watch the seven episodes that were actually released in a similar quality: