Well, I don't know what the sales figures are like, but I imagine if the old flushable filler had sold better than a modern style continuing story, Pocket would only be publishing that. If they ever stop with the post relaunch series and return to babysitting the safe old fans with canned stories that can by definition never have real stakes for the characters, I'll gladly stop buying their output. You already have the TOS range for that. It worries me that you want to kill the only Star Trek left that still has a pulse and a brain.
That would be a great compromise. I just don't want to see an end to the Star Trek relaunch universe.
I don't want the relaunches to end, but to pretend that there are 'real stakes' is untrue. In x years of relaunch, there have been three changes to the post Nemesis set up as far as our known TV heroes are concerned...and I have no clue how to use spoiler tags so...WARNING for old spoilers...
Data, came back, but didn't really as he's off being Harry Mudd rather than actually back, Janeway died, but she's back, and Deep Space Nine got blown up and replaced with a dull version. That's it.
All other changes have been incremental and have very little positive impact, whether returning to status quo or as near as. Promotions give an extra pip or three but change very little, or get basically undone (hello goodbye Captain Geordi) or serve to sideline established characters into borderline cameos or plot tools (Kira and Sisko, and now Dax and Bashir)
To pretend that majority of readers are not reading the books for the Star Trek branding is disingenuous....if it was just for their scifi content, why bother with the licensing? There are cheaper, better (from a certain point of view) options out there for readers. (Space Captain Smith is excellent for Pratchett fans, and has the absolute best Star Trek conference story to happen...just not in Trek. Read them. They are awesome.)
The draw has to be the franchise, and our family of characters....but the glacial pace, combined with the fact they don't actually seem to be the people we remember, except for occasional flashes (and the recent upswing in quality has helped me enjoy them more than I was) has worked against the books. They are very much treading water, it's just not familiar water.
I don't want to see the relaunches end, I just want to see them move a little closer to what those series titles actually refer to, and not go the way of the Star Wars EU (which by the end were really bound up in their own little history and were turning into something very much not like Star Wars. They were really tired when they ended.)
Which brings up another important point...new viewers to old Trek are going to be brought in by this new series and the streaming of the older series. And when they come to the books...what will they find?
It's time to open that literary sandbox up, but also move it closer to what we knew before, even if we have to temporal shenanigans the heck out of the DS9 station.