Gosh that event would sell
lots of novels!
What event? Events are advertised. This wasn't (and before somebody says 'that would ruin the surprise', she was killed off at the very beginning of the book, nor was it exactly a salient plot point). Events ought to be carefully planned. This was incredibly callous. Events have impact. Janeway's death was further demeaned by being entirely irrelevant, with scant mention of its effects on those close to her.
That's your choice, but a novel that threatens a perhaps-final fate of a main character is going to attract more interest than one where a main character retires to care for an elderly relative.
Only if potential readers know about it. And the only way they'll know about it is from other readers, from whom the reaction so far has been either "Janeway's dead, and I'm glad, 'cause I hated the bitch", which won't attract any Voyager fans, or "They killed Janeway in a terrible, insulting manner", which won't attract any Voyager fans either.
Did ST II do well when they killed off Spock, despite full page ads in "Variety" from angry fans who announced they were boycotting the movie and all tie-ins? Did the SW novel that killed off Chewbacca do well?
You can't really make such comparisons. STII was a film in a nascent franchise (ask yourself: did Nemesis do better for killing Data?).
Vector Prime was a hardcover that launched a major series and drastic changes for the literary universe, and was advertised as such. Also, both characters died heroically--Spock saving the Enterprise, Chewie saving Anakin. Their deaths were wonderfully crafted scenes--Spock's farewell to Kirk, and the subsequent funeral; Chewie memorably howling his final defiance as the moon of Sernpidal came crashing down onto him. The meek, contemptuous death with which Janeway was dispatched would be more aptly compared to Tasha Yar in "Skin of Evil" or Tucker in "These Are the Voyagers", the latter of which has been considered so abhorrent that the fiction line collapsed six years just to be able to resurrect him as soon as possible.
Not that bad a send-off for her, certainly a better opne than Kirk got IMO.
I can't agree with this. Kirk died saving the lives of millions on Veridian IV from a madman. His legacy is the continued existence of an entire species. Janeway's death had no purpose, and her legacy--through the memories assimilated, the body hijacked by the collective--was involuntarily aiding greater slaughter.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman