Hey,
I just finished THE FACE OF THE UNKNOWN, which is part of my ongoing project to read 40 Star Trek books this year. Which is exactly the number of Star Trek books I have bought on my Kindle and picked up from the second hand bookstore over the past few years but never got around to reading. I've managed to read The Klingon Empire series, am re-reading New Frontier, did Rise of the Federation, Vanguard, and have also done a number of TNG Novelverse ones. So, yes, I'm actually pretty far into it.
I was really interested in this because I've always been a fan of Star Trek politics and was fascinated by the concept of THE FIRST FEDERATION as introduced in "The Corbomite Maneuver." I was a bit surprised to realize no one had ever picked up that angle before and was mostly only remembered by me because it's located in Star Trek: Online. So I assumed there would have been more follow-up that never happened despite it being in the credits of Star Trek: TOS forever.
I have to say that this is probably one of my favorite Star Trek "exploration" storylines as Christopher creates an entire mythology around the First Federation that make them a full galactic power and something that could have become an enormous influence in the galaxy but just...didn't.
Well, more precisely, it expanded to a point where it probably was the biggest power in the galaxy and then stopped. I'm reminded a bit of classical China and wonder if this would be a possible fate of the Federation. They become a home for thousands of races, become complacent, and then become vulnerable.
The continuity in this book is not quite as heavy as with Christopher Bennett's other books but it is still well-researched with plenty of homages. I was mostly interested in the politics of the book that feel more relevant than ever despite it being written before 2016's elections were resolved. There's a massive amount of science denial, climate change denial, and lying directly to the public's face that feels all too relevant.
I also give this book kudos for being one of the works that contains a space super-structure. I've always loved space super-structures and things like Dyson Spheres. This is one of the more imaginative ones. While we can't speculate on the future of the setting, I could easily see the First Federation spreading far across the Alpha and Beta Quadrants using their technology. Why settle worlds when you can settle space?
If I had any complaints, it's the fact the Dassik were a bit too overthetop in their evil. They had a good reason for it but kind of reminded me a bit of the Hiromi from the old Marvel Star Wars games that were a parody of the Galactic Empire. They're primitive, evil, and cruel for 90% of the book until we discover their reasons and that didn't entirely affect my original negative opinion. Even so, I really liked the twist they were only the "enemy" to be feared because of the gross incompetence of the government.
Kudos as always, Christopher.