I remember at one point an author (possibly @Greg Cox) said most tie-in fiction was read by roughly two percent of a shows viewers. Does the CANON!!! banner that seems to be everywhere right now and attached to everything, actually appreciably increase book/comic sales?
I'm actually quite curious about how that relationship has changed because of the other half of the ratio; 1% of the audience of TNG reading Trek novels when it was on over-the-air TV in the 1990s, if any decent fraction of them stuck with prose Trek (you know, us), that actually mean that, in addition to the casual readers brought in because there's a new show out, with the much tighter reach of a streaming show, the proportion of readers to viewers has gone up. (Or, different pathway to the same result, since the audience has to seek out CBSAA to watch Trek, it's mostly made of the Trek die-hards who are most likely to get secondary materials like novels, comics, video games, and so on. My rough estimates for Discovery's first season suggested that the number of viewers was probably a bit less than Enterprise's final season, which might be leading the Trek tie-in lines in a direction more like the video game tie-ins mentioned earlier, where a lot of the value to the reader is that they are relatively tightly integrated with the source works). Of course, book publishing in general doesn't give out hard numbers the way TV does (nor does streaming, for that matter, but they'll drop an order-of-magnitude figure in an interview now and then), so I genuinely don't know how many people read books at all as a matter of course, never mind Star Trek novels.
In short, situation normal. Everybody relax, and breathe regular.
Aw, Dayton, we actually know how you'd know what's going on, it makes taking sides and reading between everyone's lines so much less fun!
I thought “Space Vixens” was code for Star Fox. Nevermind.
As someone who, if I may say so myself, has gotten pretty good at recognizing all the different ways the various authors involved with Trek drop hints and let things slip about unannounced future projects, that'd be pretty on-the-nose. Like, if someone was going to be that obvious, they'd just straight-up say it.
Besides, he's clearly talking about Firefly. It's always Firefly.

(That's not entirely a joke guess, the Firefly/Serenity tie-in strategy has been really, really weird, and I'd absolutely believe that Fox or Universal wanted to have an option for two parallel novel lines for some unfathomable reason.)