Diane Carey
American writer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Diane L. Carey-Brodeur (born October 2, 1954) is an American fiction writer, publishing under the pen names Lydia Gregory, Diane Carey, and D. L. Carey.[1]
October 2, 1954
Diane Carey,
D. L. Carey
Diane L. Carey-Brodeur | |
|---|---|
| Born | Diane L. Carey October 2, 1954 Flint, Michigan, U.S. |
| Pen name | Lydia Gregory, Diane Carey, D. L. Carey |
| Occupation | Novelist |
| Language | English |
| Period | 1982–present |
| Genre | fiction |
| Subject | science fiction, historical romance |
| Notable works | Star Trek Novels |
| Spouse | Gregory E. Brodeur |
| Children | 3 |
Background
Diane L. Carey was born on October 2, 1954, in Flint, Michigan, United States.[2] She married Gregory E. "Greg" Brodeur, an editor, and they had three children: Lydia, Gordon, and Ben. The family lives in Michigan.[3]
Carey's first publication was a romance novel written under the pseudonym of Lydia Gregory.[1][3] Her later writings have been published under two variants of her maiden name: Diane Carey and D. L. Carey.[1] She has also written children's novels, but is best known for her work in the Star Trek franchise.[4][5] She has been the lead-off writer for two Star Trek spin-off book series: Star Trek: The Next Generation with Star Trek: Ghost Ship, and the novelization of the Star Trek: Enterprise pilot, Broken Bow. Carey's literary work has been recognized and highlighted at Michigan State University in their Michigan Writers Series.[6]
Bibliography
As Lydia Gregory
Historical romance novels
- Unwilling Enchantress (1982)[7]
As Diane Carey
Historical romance novels
Star Trek original series
- Dreadnought! (1986; 2000)[12] #29; Fortunes of War #1
- Battlestations! (1986) #31; Fortunes of War #2
- Final Frontier (1988)[13]
- Best Destiny (1992)[14]
- The Great Starship Race (1993; 2000)[15] #67
- First Frontier (1995; 2000)[16] #75; co-author Dr. James I. Kirkland
- Invasion!: Book One of First Strike (1996; 2012)[17] in Star Trek: Adventures In Time And Space! edited by Mary P. Taylor
- Cadet Kirk (1996)[18] Starfleet Academy #3
- Starfleet Academy (1997)[19]
- Wagon Train to the Stars (2000)[20] #89; New Earth #1
- Belle Terre (2000; 2012)[21] #90; New Earth #2; co-author Dean Wesley Smith
- Challenger (2000)[22] #94; New Earth #6
- Chainmail (2001)[23] Gateways #2
- What Lay Beyond (2001) Gateways #7; co-authors Peter David, Keith R. A. DeCandido, Christie Golden, Robert Greenberger, and Susan Wright[24]
Star Trek: The Next Generation series
Star Trek Deep Space Nine series
- The Search (1994; 2000) (novelization)[30]
- Station Rage (1995; 2000)[31] #13
- The Way of the Warrior (1995; 2000) (novelization)[32]
- Trials and Tribble-ations (1996; 2000) co-author David Gerrold (novelization)[33]
- Call to Arms (1998)[34] The Dominion War #2
- ...Sacrifice of Angels (1998)[35] The Dominion War #4
- What You Leave Behind (1999)[36] (novelization)
Star Trek Voyager series
- Flashback (1996; 2002)[37] co-author Brannon Braga (novelization)
- Fire Ship (1998) novella in collection Star Trek: The Captain's Table (1998)[38]
- Equinox (1999) (novelization)[39]
- Endgame (2001) (novelization) co-author Christie Golden[40] (not to be confused with End Game by Peter David)
- Unimatrix Zero (2001) (novelization)
Star Trek Enterprise series
- Broken Bow (2001) (novelization)[41]
Aliens series
Movie novelizations
- S.W.A.T (2003)[44]