Having a bit of internal tension was the initial idea. However, Before Dishonor took the characters in a direction their creators hadn't expected, so that the tension went way beyond "a bit" and reached a level that you really couldn't come back from. It made it unviable to keep those characters in the crew after that.
That's what happens when you give Peter David basically
carte blanche in a shared sandbox. What did the editors think would happen? Positive character development? That hasn't been a fixture of David's work since before
Gods Above game out. Letting him be a part of the TNG Relaunch - without
strict groundrules - was a disaster waiting to happen.
I used to be a fan of PAD's work.
Vendetta and
Imzadi are classics of
Trek literature, and early
New Frontier is enjoyable... but his writing has become contrived, bloated, pompous and shallow, as if he doesn't give a
damn for characterization anymore and just does whatever crazy thing comes into his mind and to hell with the consequences.
If you can't tell,
Before Dishonor completely soured me on the TNG Relaunch, whereas I found
Q & A to be one of the better
Trek novels of the last couple years.
Resitence seemed more to be a prologue than a complete story, and
Death and Winter did nothing for me, but neither was so terrible that I wouldn't pick up the next novel. I'm very glad I read
Q & A, but wish I had stopped there. I
liked Leybenzon in that book, connected with Kadohata right away, and thought there was serious potential with T'Lana's character. But in comes Peter David and it all gets blown to hell like the Great Bird of the Galaxy erupting from a planet's core.
Thanks to that worthless waste of eight dollars plus tax and several hours I will never get back, I have
no interest
whatsoever in picking up
any of the subsequent books in the line. And while I have enjoyed David Mack's writing in the past, what I've heard about
Destiny just makes me cringe. It's not the kind of
Trek I want to read about. Not in the slightest.