Okay, a few things that need to be said before I dive back into this quagmire....
Johnny, I am
NOT an editor on staff at Pocket Books, and I'm not publishing anything. I'm a freelancer who sometimes does editorial work for Pocket. I've line-edited some manuscripts, and I was also responsible for putting together the eBook line from 2001-2008 and for the anthologies that bear my name. That's it. The editor responsible for
Kobayashi Maru is Margaret Clark.
Secondly, your constant insistence that you're not trying to pick a fight while repeatedly picking them, and your constant putting words in the mouth of others aren't tactics that lend me to any kind of desire to engage in conversation and/or debate with you. You've actively pissed off several people I consider good friends and colleagues, and that is about eight million points in favor of telling you to screw off and die.
However, I made a statement while running out the door to the subway, one I should've read over before I posted because I fucked up royally.
It is the shorter one that I think sounds more like people talking and like Bakula and Maris, not the longer one.
Sorry to fuck up your argument for you, but it's my own damn fault. I was rushing out the door, saw your post, kept telling myself not to get sucked into it, deal with it when I got back home, but I had to get a word in, and I got it backwards.
The longer bit definitely has merits. I think the dialogue in Andy & Mike's bit -- in particular, "Who are you, and what have you done with Jonny Archer?" which is a line I could see the woman I met in "Home" saying with no trouble -- is
much stronger and more like the characters. The rewrite has some nice descriptive bits, and I like the fact that the log entry didn't wake Porthos, but the call from Hernandez did. On the other hand, the rewrite's use of sentence fragments drove me batshit crazy, and the log entry was just stupid.
Having said that, there are elements of Andy & Mike's that I didn't like as much. But I think, ultimately, that Andy & Mike's is stronger.
Finally, reading the rewrite would have made me confused about the byline, because it was written in a style that is most definitely
not that of Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels. When I pick up a book with that byline, I expect it to read like Andy & Mike. The rewrite doesn't read like them. The original does. Authors have distinctive styles.
In fact, the original blog post that started it all had this response from the blog owner:
"You’re correct that the other chapters in the sampler were better — but they all suffered from the same type of problem to some degree. It makes me wonder if good writers aren’t writing in this style on purpose because the readers expect it. Scary thought."
Christopher Bennett's style is nothing like Andy & Mike's, nor is it anything like David Mack's, nor Andy & Mike's like Dave's. If this guy can't distinguish among the three, then I'm not going to consider his opinion good for much.
I apologize for the confusion my fucked-up post caused.
On to your specific points:
1) He’s not ‘reviewing the book’, he’s making a general point about the line, using one passage as an example.
Which is rather like making a point about a cruise ship by looking at a single cabin and not even gazing upon the rest of the boat.
2) The reason that passage was in the giveaway in the first place was, presumably, to sway the undecided and show Star Trek fiction at its best. So it's legitimate, surely, to say ‘that didn't sway me'? If the trailer doesn’t make the moviegoer want to see the movie, it’s not the moviegoer’s fault, let alone his problem. If it’s the start of a book, it’s the same deal – that passage is presumably there to wow and hook people and get them to keep reading.
Wrong and wrong. The giveaway was at a panel that previewed upcoming
Star Trek fiction, and was designed to tease fans for what was coming.
3) You weren't exactly going out of your way to defend the passage. Not to the David Mack extent of effectively saying (post 60 in this thread) 'it's terrible, but we don't all write that badly', but isn't it telling that you didn't say 'wow, that passage was GREAT, what's his problem?'.
That isn't what Dave said, and that isn't what I said. Defending the passage was also beside the point.
4) The guy in the comments thread – some random passing fanboy - who reworked the passage did a better job than the professional writer who was hired to write the book. Doesn’t that worry you, even a little bit?
Asked and answered, and even if I bought your premise, why would this worry me, exactly? I'm genuinely confused as to why this is cause for worry. So two people can write. So what?