![]() I did a ton of work on Buffy, Angel, Alias, and Xena, but when it came to Lost, I felt like a university student again, triple-checking my research and not slacking off in any way, for fear the prof will catch me out on it. I had the opportunity to sit down with Nikki and discuss the process of creating books for rabid fans.ĭo you find the Lost crowd as famously hard to please as the producers do?Īs someone who is part of that crowd, I know that I demand a lot from the producers myself, and as a result, I probably do double the research on the Lost books as I’ve done for any other show. Stafford has succeeded in creating books for a crowd that could arguably be called the most difficult to please. Stafford knows as well as anyone that the Lost fanbase is filled with pride when it comes to maintaining an encyclopedic range of knowledge of the show’s mythos, characters, places, and general minutiae. For several years the Canadian author has been combining her word-smithing skills with her story teller’s sensibilities to create guides for such shows as Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Xena, Angel, Alias, and more recently Lost. ![]() Nikki Stafford knows TV, and she knows TV fans. ![]()
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