This page claims to have the exact text of her biography from Lincoln Enterprises - I followed links from Memory Alpha to find it. There’s a couple of more links on that page, but going through all of this on my tablet is a bit clunky.
Hope it helps!
I wouldn’t really call Lincoln Enterprises a publishing house. Their main offering was xeroxed copies of scripts from Star Trek and other TV shows, as well as things like some production cels, Star Trek key rings and stickers, IDIC necklaces, and other small items. The M’ress biography was probably no more than a couple of pages copied out of the ST-TAS series proposal or bible on demand. I ordered some items from them here and there and had several of the catalogues. They were indistinguishable from many fan dealers that sold similar items at conventions and through the mails. They definitely weren’t a publishing house as the term is generally used.
One of the animated series adapted stories has background info on her…including some bit with the bridge getting destroyed because…well…its right on top of the damn ship!
GythaOgg is correct. Back in the 70s I had one of Lincoln Enterprises’ crude, amateurish catalogs, and it was the same junk you’d see on dealer tables at fan conventions. The “publications,” if you can call them that, were mostly just straight photocopies of production documents.
Here’s an image of a typical catalog page. Note the “official biographies” (20 cents each!) listed in the lower right corner; that M’Ress biography was undoubtedly something similar.
I forgot to mention that Lincoln Enterprises merchandise does occasionally show up on eBay. Bosda, I’d suggest you keep an eye out; a copy of the “bible” for the animated series might turn up.
In the recent books the 50 Year Mission, they talk some about Lincoln Enterprises. Some things they mentioned Gene and his wife selling were film cells from the show and at one point he took the still in progress TNG Show bible (prior to the show coming out) and sold xeroxes of that. Beyond things like that, it definitely had the air of cashing in on whatever they thought Trekkers would buy.
Speaking of cheap 70’s Trek…i used to buy the posters that came out with stuff with it like maps and time lines including the bit in the novelization of “Tomorrow is Yesterday” where Scotty refers to a Vegan Tyranny
I believe that was in this Alan Dean Foster adaptation: Star Trek Log 5 | Memory Alpha | Fandom. IIRC there was a brief section on her childhood and her early Starfleet career (including being badly wounded by Orion pirates who attacked her ship).