On Fanlore, users with accounts can edit pages including user pages, can create pages, and more. Any information you publish on a page or an edit summary will be accessible by the public and to Fanlore personnel. Because Fanlore is a wiki, information published on Fanlore will be publicly available forever, even if edited later. Be mindful when sharing personal information, including your religious or political views, health, racial background, country of origin, sexual identity and/or personal relationships. To learn more, check out our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Select "dismiss" to agree to these terms.
Death of a Flame, or Amanda's Mission
Fanfiction | |
---|---|
Title: | Death of a Flame, or Amanda's Mission |
Author(s): | Doris Beteem |
Date(s): | 1972 |
Length: | |
Genre(s): | gen |
Fandom(s): | |
Relationship(s): | |
External Links: | Death of a Flame, or Amanda's Mission |
Click here for related articles on Fanlore. | |
Death of a Flame, or Amanda's Mission is a 1973 Star Trek: TOS Kraith story by Doris Beteem.
It was published in Grup #1 as the third part of "Wreath of Kraith." Then it was reprinted in Kraith Collected #1 (1973) and Introduction to Star Trek Fanzines (1975).
Series
- Wreath of Kraith, part one: Child-of-the-Tradition, or Sluraz' Affirmation
- Wreath of Kraith, part two: Won't You Walk a Little Faster, or Tanya's Argument
- Wreath of Kraith, part three: Death of a Flame, or Amanda's Mission
Fan Comments
Contrast A Matter of Priority with Doris Beteem's Death of a Flame (Amanda's Mission), which was undeveloped and unsatisfying, made Sarek out to be an echo of the caricature Spock was in "THAT WHICH SURVIVES," one of the awful offerings of the 3rd season, and left Amanda with even less of a personality than she appeared to have in "JOURNEY TO BABEL; and you'll see what I mean. There was also, for one of the few times in the whole Lichtenberg collocation, an intensely lyrical and even moving scene where, preparatory to going to help Kirk and McCoy deal with a transporter-room full of half-wild Vulcan children, Spock and T'Aniyeh (Tanya) join minds and form a link to give them both inner peace, so as to give peace to the frantic children. It's one of the few places where Lichtenberg lets her hair down and shows what she can do to stir your soul, as a writer and as a person. Reading what she can do, and how seldom she'll do it, is frustrating. [1]
References
- ^ from Kraith Review (Whap! Crunch! Ow!) (1974) by Carla Sherman