Enigma Tales By Una McCormack, Published 2017-06-27
There's a lot to love here, and after a few action-y books I am glad to have read this. The last chapter in particular was great to see everything fall into place, and I cried during the scene with Kukalaka.
I have no idea what the literary term may be for when the characters diegetically talk about literary devices and then the book uses those literary devices, but McCormack puts that to good use here, as the book talks in the early chapters about "Enigma Tales", pulp mystery novels, and then lays down a lot of pieces and puts them all together in the end.
I love Garak as a character, though he has done so many immoral things in his past, and it's hard to know truly if a character like that can be redeemable. This book's way of doing so is by showing he knows he is not what a new Cardassia deserves, and setting up Natima Lang to be his successor. It felt well executed and was again one of those missing puzzle pieces at the end.
In contrast, the Peter Alden stuff here felt mixed, trying to tie into the spy themes, but it does give him a reason to be there when Pulaski is looking for the kidnapping victim. Particularly after coming off a section 31 novel, I don't want more of that, but it's done well enough here. As Pulaski says, "Damn! I
hate spooks"
I also love how tie-ins take Pulaski and run with her, keeping her abrasive but giving her a certain grow-on-you charm.
I'm excited to next read
The End of This Day's Business, and stevil's review of Enigma Tales. Dumped TEoTDB on my e-reader to read. I'm also of course curious about how much of the regular processes it might have gotten through, or if some britishisms may have slipped through.
My interpretation was that the epilogue was Control
“corncobbing” in its final moments, self-soothing during its death by deluding itself into thinking it has planned for that, too, and its defeat was actually its apotheosis into a being of pure thought, or super-meme, or the democratic mind-virus spreading across the galaxy or whatever it needed to tell itself to not feel like a failure.
Saw this in Stevil's thread, and I understand that reading, and think it's openly left open to interpretation, but it's the pessimistic novel so I assume the pessimistic outcome.
Was this the one where Bashir meets the MU Founders? I found that part both a little fanwanky and kind of compelling.
Where they reveal that they're benevolent, and theorize that maybe the Odo's got swapped. Which kinda works with the "mirror universe, everything's opposite" idea, but not everything is opposite, necessarily. I agree with you, it's a bit "ooohhh doesn't this explain everything" but then there's a little too much nature over nurture and I prefer each Odo to just be a product of their environment (and I don't mean ambient lighting).