The creator and driving force behind both the original Star Trek® and Star Trek: The Next Generation®, Gene Roddenberry created a mythology for the twentieth century. One of the most enduring cultural phenomenons of our time, Star Trek was from the beginning a forum where its creator, its writers and its viewers could explore the fundamental questions of life: What does goodness mean? Where does duty end and morality begin? And most often: What does it mean to be human? In the last months of his life, Roddenberry offered to ...
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The creator and driving force behind both the original Star Trek® and Star Trek: The Next Generation®, Gene Roddenberry created a mythology for the twentieth century. One of the most enduring cultural phenomenons of our time, Star Trek was from the beginning a forum where its creator, its writers and its viewers could explore the fundamental questions of life: What does goodness mean? Where does duty end and morality begin? And most often: What does it mean to be human? In the last months of his life, Roddenberry offered to share his views on life with Yvonne Fern. The result is a probing dialogue that serves as a portrait of both the man and his ideas. Roddenberry's creation opened a window into the human condition and has stirred the dreams of an entire generation. Now, reading this final message, we are moved a little closer to the luminous future that Star Trek showed was already within us.
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Add this copy of Gene Roddenberry: the Last Conversation to cart. $12.99, good condition, Sold by Russell Books rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Victoria, BC, CANADA, published 1996 by Pocket Books.
Add this copy of Gene Roddenberry: the Last Conversation; a Dialogue to cart. $27.50, good condition, Sold by Ground Zero Books, Ltd. rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Silver Spring, MD, UNITED STATES, published 1996 by Pocket Books.
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Good. 21 cm. xvi, [2], 221, [1] pages. Wraps. References. Some wear and sticker residue to covers. Foreword by Arthur C. Clarke. Yvonne Harrison Fern Solow is the wife of former Star Trek: The Original Series studio executive Herbert F. Solow of Desilu Studios/Paramount Television. She is also the author of Gene Roddenberry: The Last Conversation and co-author (with husband Herb) of The Star Trek: The Original Series Sketchbook. She is also known by her middle name, Harrison Solow. The Last Conversation is a poignant exploration of the inner world of Gene Roddenberry as he faced the end of his life. Insisting that no one could really know him or the sources of his creation without becoming part of his private world, he invited Yvonne Fern to live with him and his wife, Majel Barrett. Yvonne Fern had a series of conversations with Roddenberry, and lived with him and his wife for a while in order to become part of his world and more fully understand it. Gene Roddenberry created a mythology for the twentieth century: Star Trek. One of the most successful television shows and cultural icons of all time, Star Trek was from the beginning a forum where its creator and its viewers could explore the most fundamental questions of life: What is the difference between sexuality and love? What does goodness mean? What is the role of government? Where does duty end and morality begin? And most often: What does it mean to be human? The Last Conversation is a poignant exploration of the inner world of Gene Roddenberry as he faced the end of his life. Insisting that no one could really know him or the sources of his creation without becoming part of his private world, he invited Yvonne Fern to live with him and his wife, Majel Barrett. "I want you to write me, " he said, and later told her she had. The Last Conversation, however, is more than a portrait of a single life-it is an intellectual embrace. Well-matched in the velocity of their imagination and the depth of their understanding, Gene and Yvonne shared a journey into the meaning and worth of human existence. As Gene receded from life, Yvonne's increasingly solitary task was to convey the richness, the insight, the radiance they saw in each other and in humanity. This beautiful book, written as a philosophical dialogue, is a last confessional call upon centuries of earlier attempts to codify our understanding of human experience and what lies beyond. Throughout their intense dialogue, Gene never once spoke of the future in the future tense. It was never "the future will be, " but always "the future is." Echoing this immediately, the book is written in the timeless present, allowing each of us to take part in The Last Conversation. As we read and reread this stunning work, we are moved a little closer to the luminous future that Gene Roddenberry knew was already within us.