The Star Trek Encyclopedia

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Cover of Version 3.0
Cover of Version 3.0

The Star Trek Encyclopedia: A Reference Guide to the Future is an encyclopedia of all things related to Star Trek. The Encyclopedia was written by Michael and Denise Okuda, with Debbie Mirek, and illustrated by Doug Drexler. Three print editions have been published, in both hardcover and paperback: the first edition (ISBN 0-671-88684-3) was published in 1994; the second (ISBN 0-671-53607-9) in 1997. The most recent edition (ISBN 0-671-53609-5), published in 1999, includes material through the end of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, the fifth season of Star Trek: Voyager, and the movie Star Trek: Insurrection. All editions were published by Pocket Books; Paramount Pictures holds the copyrights.

The Encyclopedia features very detailed information about characters, planets, technologies, ships, and behind-the-scenes information, as well as brief synopses of episodes and movies. It is replete with illustrations, many of them in color (in later editions), from examples of different writing systems to the evolution of uniforms and shuttlecraft.

As a rule, the Encyclopedia covers only the live-action television shows and the movies (which are the extent of the Star Trek canon recognised by Paramount). It includes some material from the animated series (such as "Yesteryear"), and sometimes provides new information. Unlike the Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual it does not make detailed speculations about Star Trek technology.

The print version was later complemented by a similar electronic version, the Star Trek Omnipedia. The CD-ROM medium allowed the Simon & Schuster publishers to include video clips.

The first edition, at least, was designed with desktop publishing software, as was the Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual; that edition's inconsistencies in typography are common among products of word-processing software, especially those of the early and mid 1990s. The inconsistency lies mainly in the matter of whether the punctuation at the ends of bold-faced and/or italicized passages is in a matching face or not.

[edit] See also

  • Memory Alpha, a wiki with the aim of producing "the most definitive, accurate and accessible encyclopedic reference for topics related to the canon Star Trek fictional universe."
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