The Missing by
Una McCormack
In-Universe Date: Late November 2385
Publish Date: December 30, 2014
According to the acknowledgements, this was pitched as a/the
Katherine Pulaski novel. We certainly do get a lot of her, and a focus on her as a character being quite grating (and she knows it). I felt it was interesting to see the interaction between her and a lot of characters, old and new. I'm not sure if any other books have paired her up with crusher/have any comments on her brief tenure as CMO of the Enterprise, but it was definitely interesting to read.
This felt like a good example of episodic storytelling to me. It had a encounter-of-the-week with the People of the Open Sky/The Chain, and additional developments with the relationship to the Tzenkethi. I love seeing some attempts at peaceful relations, as Bacco was working towards.
The one downside of this type of story, is that we can be given an influx of new characters, and this group had a lot of very similar names (in particular, "Oioli, Ioile, and Ailoi") such that I wasn't sure which one of them was killed, being killed, accused of killing, etc.
The other thing about trek literature, or at least McCormacks, is that we often have multiple plots going on at once and converging. This is decidedly less linear than the last two books I read, which I enjoyed, but it does make describing all the plots going on without taking over an hour to write up much more difficult. I don't think I should bother writing out all the plots going on, if you want that, you can read a wiki summary or a better review than mine. Suffice to say, the main plot is that a group of refugees from poverty is fleeing an oppressive government, and the conclusion is that they are let go by an understanding commander of the oppressive government. There is a lot more going on to make it a lot more complex, particularly with some spying all around, but that's the crux/theme. It's a nice, hopeful, very trek theme.
We get follow-up of the Tzenkethi who left Ab-Tzenketh in Brinkmanship, and it was interesting to see how she interacts with a society so different from her own. I think her journey of self-discovery and freedom is supposed to parallel people of the open sky having left the oppressive culture of the chain. Thinking about it now, the 3rd plot we have here, of Ro and Odo working to return some Cardassian prisoners of war from the Romulan government, is also to some degree about working around a more rigid social structure for decency.
I enjoyed this book, and somewhat hope that we'll get to see the side characters again. It's very interesting to see Crusher with a different crew, although she's going back to the enterprise after this one. I'm making note of that for when I attempt to come up with my own, clearly superior to everyone else's, reading order after I get through all of this. It also seems like Odo is going to be around to stay on DS9, not as a constable (and hopefully not as CMO, which might have been a joke from Ro or just a segue that could have implied the possibility).
Next up is the second Novella from the previous pair, The Rules of Accusation, then jumping into Sacraments of Fire and Ascendance. It sounds like sacraments is supposed to fill in a lot of gaps, and It's also from David R. George III, so I'm hoping it follows up on mysterious man from the past, and maybe we get Kira back. I also particularly enjoyed his narration that something strange was going on with Rebecca, and I'm interested for that to be flushed out more.
Sorry I'm jumping around in my thoughts, but I don't want to spend a ton of time editing this. Towards the start of the novel, it seemed there was a lot of personified narration going on, stuff like
Corazame—but let us call her Cory, the name she has been using since coming to the Federation, and as we are prying into her private thoughts, we should at least show her the courtesy of using the name she is using—Cory [did stuff]
As the book goes on, there's seemingly less and less of that, however. Perhaps it's just that there's more plot going on and so less need for it. My wife has been reading "The String of Pearls" (what Sweeny Todd was based off of) and that style of narration was much more common then, or perhaps it varies by genre. I'd be interested in knowing more. If only there was someone with a Ph.D. in English literature, with a specialization in Victorian literature and science in this forum.