But I deemed that necessary due to the nature of the beast. GTTS had to be a couple of things. It had to work as a resolution to the arc of the previous novels, and that meant filling in some gaps and resolving some apparent discrepancies in order to show how the arc formed a cohesive whole. It also had to work as a lead-in to Destiny, something that could effectively bring people up to speed even if they hadn't read what came before. Also, because of what was happening to the Borg in Destiny, GTTS was probably the last chance to revisit and resolve some lingering threads and mysteries surrounding the Borg. Each one of those individually created a need for exposition and recap, and I'm afraid that cumulatively it ended up being a bit much.
Not to presume to tell anybody how to do their job, but I wonder if other methods of presentation were considered (and dismissed, and if so for what reason). To me, the three big offenders is terms of constipated chunks were the Recent History of Federation/Borg Clashes, the Recent History of the Enterprise Crew, and the History of Hugh's Liberated/Unimatrix Zero Rebels. As I was reading through the first two, I wondered if it might not have been better to put all that recapping outside the narrative per se at the beginning of the book, a sort of "Previously on Star Trek: The Next Generation" thing (too off-putting to potential buyers to have such a large summary at the beginning, perhaps?). Hugh's history had to be part of the narrative, and I appreciated that an attempt was made to make it more dynamic via conversation and some of the back and forth, but I wish it had been done via a series flashbacks instead, breaking off in the briefing at one chapter, then progressing through the foundation of Hugh's society, the arrival of the rebels, falling in love, detecting the Einstein, etc, then picking back up in the briefing at the beginning of the next chapter, the preceeding chapter being Hugh's dramatized exposition to Picard and Co. On the other hand, this probably would have required the book be longer, and perhaps disrupted the pacing of the book with its otherwise large chapters.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman