Diane Duane: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
m (Robot: Cosmetic changes)
m (adding NameSort)
Line 3: Line 3:


Duane is one of a handful of writers to have written original fiction for both the ''Doctor Who'' and ''[[Star Trek]]'' franchises, and is one of only two ''Doctor Who''-franchise contributors to date to have actually been involved in the writing of a ''Trek'' TV episode. (The other is [[David Wise]], who wrote an episode of ''The Animated Series'' more than thirty-five years before contributing an episode of [[Big Finish Productions]]' ''[[Gallifrey (audio series)|Gallifrey]]'' series.
Duane is one of a handful of writers to have written original fiction for both the ''Doctor Who'' and ''[[Star Trek]]'' franchises, and is one of only two ''Doctor Who''-franchise contributors to date to have actually been involved in the writing of a ''Trek'' TV episode. (The other is [[David Wise]], who wrote an episode of ''The Animated Series'' more than thirty-five years before contributing an episode of [[Big Finish Productions]]' ''[[Gallifrey (audio series)|Gallifrey]]'' series.
{{NameSort}}


[[Category:Prose writers|Duane, Diane]]
[[Category:Prose writers|Duane, Diane]]

Revision as of 01:56, 22 November 2012

RealWorld.png

Diane Duane is an American science fiction writer who wrote the short story Goths and Robbers and contributed to Perfect Timing 2 and The Cat Who Walked Through Time. She is also known for her Young Wizards series and has also written novels based upon other franchises, including X-Men and seaQuest DSV. In Star Trek circles she is best known for her Rhiannsu series of novels and for co-writing the story for the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Where No One Has Gone Before". Her scriptwriting work also includes episodes of many 1980s-era animated series.

Duane is one of a handful of writers to have written original fiction for both the Doctor Who and Star Trek franchises, and is one of only two Doctor Who-franchise contributors to date to have actually been involved in the writing of a Trek TV episode. (The other is David Wise, who wrote an episode of The Animated Series more than thirty-five years before contributing an episode of Big Finish Productions' Gallifrey series.