Just finished! I enjoyed it for the most part, but it wasn't exactly the gripping fallout to Control that I was expecting. I enjoyed both the Nejamri sections and the Control sections, and would have enjoyed either areas expanded on in their own books, but having them together in this story wasn't working with me as well as it should have. I think my problem is that, even though each part didn't feel complete enough as stories, the time spent in both parts was very meandering and flashbacking.
As far as my two-cents on flashbacking goes, this novel had a lot of the flashbacking that I don't always enjoy. I'm all for refreshing memories, as there have been a lot of books, but I can't stand it when that internal thought the character is having is in the middle of a dramatic moment. It really cuts into the pacing when stuff is going on, only for the character in question to reflect upon an incident from 10 years ago that is mildly similar to what's going on now. I felt that there were quite a few inelegant choices made.
The investigation scenes were working for me when it was a man-hunt and interrogations and mysteries and closet skeletons. Then they stopped working when the scenes just became about characters espousing Federation ideals and the outrage. I also wanted to learn a little bit more about Section 31 itself, but we only got to see the biggest TV-series names. It just felt like the book started off with this great outline of intrigue that devolved into a set of cameos.
The Enterprise story was pretty well served. Spreading the threat of the space not-pirates across three sets of ships made them a little less interesting overall. Brinnimar turned out to be a potentially deep character, so I kinda wish she had just been the overall not-villain the whole time rather than the second set. The Nejamri and their predicament was set up as a really nice mystery, but it felt like there sure where a lot of scenes of the heroes just fixing things, hooking this up to that, complaining about environmental suits (I know... this is not a joke that is going to go away any time soon) or just plain old waving of tricorders. I mean, I get the ship is broken, but more than a couple times I felt like I was imagining people fixing a sink.
I'm gonna call it average. Started off really strongly, but didn't wrap the stories together enough for me...usually spending most of its time waving tricorders or talking about the outrage. I would have liked to see some of that outrage, honestly, other than a single assassination behind closed doors.
Random thing:
T'ryssa Chen and Taurik were nicely written and I love their friendship, but I do not love having to constantly be reminded that they are 'friends'. The amount of times Taurik is referred to as 'friend' in the writing (not the dialogue) it felt like there was some Hollywood style backlash on Taurik and Trys dating that the PR department had to make it DAMN clear that these two are NOT together anymore!