Um..
Well see..everything just kinda went away.Permanently.
I know you are upset with how things went for Garak especially but TBH I thought the character was ill -served by later books anyway.It kinda bothered me that this shadow warrior,spy,secret policeman,assassin should morph into a cuddly “president of the people”.That didn’t match with my opinion of the guy at all.
And that Cardassia,the war devastated home of paranoia and state police suddenly morphed into Berkeley Ca.
But what happened to Garak in Second Self is much, much more destructive, wrong and out-of-character than what he was in the books
The Never-Ending Sacrifice and
The Crimson Shadow.
Garak is most of all a Cardassian patriot. Back in the days of the old empire, he was an "shadow warrior,spy,secret policeman,assassin" because he was raised by Enabran Tain to be such a person and he thought that he did what was best for Cardassia.
But later on and especially during his exile on station Deep Space Nine, he found out that Cardassia was on the wrong path and then he started to work against the government.
After the war, when Cardassia was liberated, he used his skills and patriotism to work for the new Cardassia and therefore he had to change. He wasn't or would never be any "cuddly president of the people" but if the author of the books had kept writing about Garak in the way he was in those books instead of making him a wimp, ruining the character and killing him off, then he could have been a very interesting character who would work for the new Cardassia and by doing so be involved in different plots to work against those who would like to turn cardassia into what it was during the days of military rule. But all that is ruined now, thanks to the events in
Second Self.
And stating that Cardassia, "the war devastated home of paranoia and state police had suddenly morphed into Berkeley Ca. is much exaggerated.
You should probably take into account that he is presenting his subjective and, in my opinion, grossly inaccurate and deeply misleading description of the Coda trilogy's plot and themes.
So what am I wrong about when it comes to
Coda? Enlighet me please.
I understand being offended by Lynx's characterization of you (and James and Dayton) based on a pithy summation aimed at undercutting his exaggerated, misinformed, and out-of-proportion reaction to other books, but it's really obvious that he would absolutely hate
Coda more than anyone else on this board and I think it's a bad idea for everyone involved to try and suggest otherwise.
Lynx has been very clear about what he likes and what he doesn't, not just over the lifetime of the board, but on
this page of this thread.
Coda was unambiguously more violent than
Second Self and the Janeway autobiography. It definitely upset the status quo. It was absolutely not an adventurous romp with our favorite characters in their prime, even if you expand "prime" include the kind of acts euphemistically referred to as "their finest hour" (a term which Lynx definitely would not agree with in general and certainly not in particular).
Frankly,
Lynx would probably react even more negatively to Coda if it was described thematically than he did from me stating its functional outcome and adding that it was a very violent story compared to the very
non-violent ones he's already excoriating as emblematic of our degenerate, fallen age.
Yes, I have stated that I don't like the character destruction which I've read about in
Second Self and the janeway biography. I'm simply tired of seeing my old favorites being killed off or turn into uninteresting no-no's in the current books when I want to read about future adventures for them in a way which the different relaunch series was. Althught there were things I was not so happy with in the Relaunch books, like the absence of many good characters and the reluctance when it came to doing away with stupid things in TNG, DS9 and VOY, those relaunch books were much better than the constant doom-and-gloom scenarios which constantly shows up in my face now. I suppose that the whole
Coda thing is just that too.
What I see now is the destruction of Star Trek, how it is turned into just another doom-and-gloom thing so typical for this century. It's the destruction of something I've loved since I was a kid and that makes me sad and angry, especiallt when there is nothing "out there" anymore to replace it with.