Somebody's gotta say it, so it might as well be me.
I think you guys are really, really, really overestimating the amount of fans you're talking about here. Remember, you're talking a very small percentage (the standard I've heard most often used is 5% or less) of the total viewership that even picks up the books. Even looking at optimistic numbers, with the estimated 4 million in viewership in the last season of Voyager, 5% of that would be 200,000 people. Across the entire United States. 200,000 out of 4 MILLION viewers. And that's being optimistic. Can anyone claim for certain to know what 200 Trek fans will do at any one time, let alone 200,000? Anyone who says yes is lying through their teeth.
We can only speak for ourselves. Yes, there are some that will turn their backs because of decisions made. But there are others that may be more willing to pay attention because of those decisions. Every major development in a story is a risk. There's no way to know whether a risk is going to pay off if you don't take it.
And no, I'm not going to end on the Kirk line. That would be obvious.
Although I do find the notion of "casual" fans versus the rabid die-hard fans debating the subject to be fascinating. Why would a "casual" Voyager fan have enough emotional investment in the show to pick up a TNG book, let alone a VOY novel?
I still think it's wrong to simply dismiss those who might be angry and upset over killing off Janeway as "some small minority who doesn't count". Maybe it's this small minority who, due to their ardent fandom, are the people who will carry the relaunch forward in the long run, or could have done it if Janeway hadn't been so rudely treated by those in charge.
I'm not dismissing anyone. And I never once said anyone doesn't count. Please point out where I said that. I'm merely trying to give this a reality check. Everyone's opinion counts, IMO, but without any actual numbers, you have no idea how many people share your feelings. You can't possibly speak for 200,000 people, can you? Can you speak for 100,000? 50? We can only speak for ourselves. We can only be sure of our own stance. That is my point. We each have one voice. Claiming that some sort of army rides with you in this Quixote-esque crusade? How can you do that and expect to be taken seriously?
Cripes, Lynx, I was right there with you all, having been there more than once before myself, until everyone started going all drama with a capital-and-boldface D. Yeah, I know just how much it sucks to lose a favorite character in a series and see other characters you can't stand be kept around for no reason other than other people like them. (Worf. Remember. The more time spent on Worf, the less interested I automatically become, and it's been like that since long before I started posting here. I'm pissed because nobody will kill the damned character off, how's that one for you?)
You can sit and bitch about it, annoying everyone in a four state radius and making a general nuisance of yourself and only get more frustrated when nothing you do changes anything. Been there, done that, t-shirt's tattered from being laundered so much. It's how I started writing fanfic. (I'm speaking in general here, I'm not saying anyone in particular is behaving that way, so nobody should even INFER this from my words, please), or you can realize that you're pissed off about the death of someone who isn't even real. Yes, this is a death that has affected you, but has it affected you in a way different from someone you physically knew, touched, and spent time with dying? If the answer to that question is "no", I recommend a therapist, because the distinction between fantasy and reality has disappeared.
If the answer is "yes", then how do you deal with the death? Do you assimilate it, go through the grieving process, and go forward with the other characters from your Voyager family? If so, then there are plenty of books for you. However, if you just can't stomach the thought of moving on without the character, can you reach into the Trek universe and physically change that death? Of course you can, in the realms of fanfic. I've been there, too. Granted, this is a unique situation where the death could easily be reversed onscreen if the PTB wanted to go back to the 24th Century, but for the time being, the character is gone. It is up to you how you deal with it.
I suspect a very important thing here is also whether you're just a fan of Voyager, or whether you're a fan of the Star Trek universe as a whole. Me? I'm a 24th Century Trek fan. The others are there, they just don't interest me that much. If you're a Voyager fan, and the others just don't interest you that much? I totally get that. I feel for you, having such a narrow embrace of the Trek universe, but I hear you and I know where you're coming from.
So, what's it gonna be, guys? More
Drama? Or actual discussion?