Unauthorized biographies are not necessarily unwelcomed by their subjects, and in fact some unauthorized biographies have been criticized for displaying overeager admiration for them; however, unauthorized biographies have a wider reputation for fueling controversy and painting unflattering portraits of their subjects. While unauthorized biographies often receive significant news coverage, their writers tend to face "media disdain" due to the perception that their work is
gossipy,
voyeuristic, and
busybodyish. For a period in the early 1990s, a number of independent publishers — including
Revolutionary Comics and
Personality Comics — found great success and sales of unauthorized
comic book biographies. One publisher claimed that not all its biographies were unauthorized, stating that "
DeForest Kelley... and
Kim Basinger had sent autographed copies of their biographies, and...
Walter Koenig... had edited his." However, a number of these companies later faced legal challenges to their publications, which resulted in the unauthorized comic book biography fad dying down. == References ==