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I think that unauthorized books fall into a grey area; on the one hand, they're exploiting a known commodity (a show) but none of the creative people involved with the project actually benefit from the book; that's sort of the bottom-feeder aspect to the thing...on the other hand, an unauthorized book can sometimes (but may not always) be more objective in telling the story of a given show. I've generally tried to make sure that anything associated with B5 is more than just fluff; the B5 magazine is probably the best example of this, and they've shown both the warts and the good stuff, and have in fact published any number of very critical articles and reviews of episodes (teeth-grindingly so, in some cases, but I let it go through on principle).
The Lane books fall into the "may not always be more objective" category stated above, especially the second one, in which the author, feeling that the series didn't go the way *he* would've wanted it to go, totally distorts situations and events to underscore his theme, even at the expense of honest reporting. The whole book is, frankly, skewed and even fans have considered it mainly a personal attack/fannish venting than a book about the show...it's about the author's frustrated desires and not about the show at all, in the final analysis. There's a lot of incorrect information in the book, which in an authorized book could have been caught, but here there was no safeguard against misinformation and personal opinion disguised as fact.
jms |
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