Since I loved the
Tales From... anthologies, I'm looking forward to the
Certain Point of View book. The idea of seeing the side characters stories from more than just one scene is great.

That is so terrible but hilarious that I'm more amused then infuriated.
I'm not sure I understand why you think the reveal was bad. IMHO, it did fit pretty well with the movies (given that Yoda argued against Luke initially and brought up Leia as their other hope if Luke failed).
Well, that book is joining Catalyst in the "SW books I won't read even if I was paid" category. I swear, the next time someone complains about a supposedly bad old EU book I'm just going to collapse laughing.
Given that it's a short story anthology, isn't it a bit extreme to write off the whole thing because one of the 39 stories in it doesn't appeal to you?
I've read a lot of Trek books, a LOT, and the best of them can't compare to the best of SW. Its not even a contest, Star Wars demolishes Trek in the book/comic department.
In general, I'd agree that
Star Wars has had better books than
Star Trek (although
Trek has the superior reference books). However,
The Final Reflection, by John M. Ford, is superior to pretty much every
Star Wars book to date, "no contest," as you would say (and I'm saying this as someone who likes the
Star Wars books better than that one). Diane Duane's
Doctor's Orders is also a cut above a lot of
Star Wars stuff, IMHO. "Make-Believe," a short story in the anthology
Star Trek Constellations, was better than any
Star Wars short story I've seen (although I haven't seen as many) and was a more meaningful story than a lot of
Star Wars fiction generally is. "This Drone," from the
Strange New Worlds 8, also put a lot of
Star Wars short fiction to shame.
I love the old EU much, much more then the movies. I wouldn't be a huge SW fan without the EU.
Can't really relate. The reason I like
Star Wars books is because of the movies. Take away the movies, the books aren't worth a quatloo.
I'd like them a lot, but the reason SW is neck and neck with Trek as my favorite franchise is the old EU. It had great characters and stories that put both the OT and Prequels to shame.
Star Trek and
Star Wars are my two most favorite franchises, too. I've always been a Trekkie first, though. While I will say that I've found
Star Wars more enjoyable lately (really liking the movies and the books, while I haven't liked the Abrams' movies overall, or the new novels and stuff), I still think that
Star Trek comes on top. I can't see a case were Legends would be better than the
Star Trek franchise though, (although such things are subjective); pound for pound,
Trek has a wider range of stories and a lot more good ones.
Anyway, there I am arguing. I just hate how the Old EU gets no respect. To me, the Old EU is the franchise. It is Star Wars. its like how Stargate was a mediocre, badly written movie but SG-1 was much better and basically is the franchise. The books shouldn't have kept to the OT (although they did a fairly perfect job of doing so in the books set during the OT, the only difference is they improved on every element of the era), and not "keeping to it" lead to amazing stories that made Star Wars a universe and not just a few good to great movies.
I think that in retrospect, its easier to see the flaws in things. Also, with Legends being made up as it went along and huge chunks being written before all the movies were made, it's a bit messier, which may not appeal to everyone. I've also found that the differences between the old books and the new books/movies are different enough that it's very strange going back and reading Legends materials. It feels like
Star Wars, but things aren't "right." (I also find that I really miss the post-Disney characters. It's not fair to the old stuff, since they were made before they were created, but at this point, I'm not sure I really want a
Star Wars saga where Rey, Finn, Dr. Aphra, the
Ghost crew, and the rest, are not in it.)
Also, if you're in my camp, I was finding that 99% of Legends output in the last few years of its existence was very bad and the new direction with the reboot made me like
Star Wars tie-ins again, so there is those associations with each version ("Legends was a good thing that went bad," "new canon made it good again").
Also, new canon has the advantage of being new. If they ever did a reboot again in the future, there is a good chance that we might be somewhat harsher critics of the current iteration.
So, long story short, I'm not sure Legends deserves any "hate" it gets. There is some very good stuff in it, it's provided a lot of material for the new stuff, and is worthy of respect for the world it built onto itself. However, I think that it does have flaws, many of which the Disney canon has improved on (and planned for better) and am not sure at how well it's "aging," if that makes any sense. However, it does remain to be seen how the new canon fairs long-term. It's arguably had a stronger start than its predecessor, but a good start does not guarantee a good finish.