Fine you may like KJ and Voyager, but really in a distant sort of well, its not a bad show. Voyager on the other hand is the show that I could relate to. I especially enjoyed the fact that there was a female capatain and a female chief engineer. I liked my "ship of the Valkyries" I care about what happened to that Captain, as much as you'll might care about what happens to the Sisko or to Picard. So please dont give us your little platitudes about oh but I liked janeway and I dont mind her getting killed. Its irritating to say the least.
You know what? I find that incredibly insulting.
I
love Voyager and I also felt a kin towards the female Captain and Chief Engineer and yes for the record, I love the characters of Janeway and Torres. Here's the killer. I can deal with Janeway's death in BD and as a Voyager fan, am looking forward to the future VOY-R books and have already enjoyed
Full Circle.
I am certainly not One of One. While I am guessing, in fact, I suspect there are
a lot of people who share my view and so will continue to read the relaunch books. Those of us who enjoy the books from
Full Circle on are still Voyager fans, no more and no less than you. It may just be that we are less vocal as a group but that does not mean that it can be implied that we are lesser fans than those who are upset about Janeway's death.
AMEN!! You guess right SStar

, there are many of us. Sometimes our voices just get drowned out a bit...
On a side note; the poll is still at 55% - 45%
Thank you! That's pretty validating to hear. I had a feeling that there WERE people who absolutely love Voyager, and for whom Janeway IS a favorite, yet are ok with her death. I almost said as much, but I try not to put things in my posts that could make it seem as though I'm speaking for others, so I'm glad you guys spoke up.
I really hate that sentence "moving on" because for me it means acceptance and surrender, things which have never been an option for me. And what if there's nothing to move on to?
Uh... not sure what you're getting at here. I wasn't saying YOU need to move on, only indicating that some of us have.
Yes, for some people it's an event of realism which they might like, for others it's character destruction which we could have lived without.
Um... correct? Again, not sure what you're getting at. This doesn't really tie in to the point I was bringing up, which was the difference between appriciating an additional element of realism and demanding that the books become extremely realistic.
More power to you,
Saito. I found a lot of what
Militant said to you to be insulting, but I figured you're a big boy/girl (oh no, not that again!

) and figured you can take care of yourself.
Seriously, your position is more or less my own on this matter - while I wouldn't be exactly
happy if, say, Picard had been killed, that on its own wouldn't have been enough to get me to stop reading the books. (If the subsequent books had all been crap, well, that's another story.)
Thanks! And as to the topic of my gender... Your comments have amused me to the point where I'm leaning toward continuing to keep it a mystery for the time being.
There you go using logic again. That's not going to get you anywhere.
Resistance is futile?

Can't blame me for trying, at any rate.
Yeah, pretty much. Me, I just wanted good Star Trek stories. Which I think we're getting. Others may not think so, which as you said, just boils down to difference of opinion - which you'd think wouldn't be something that you could argue for what has to be thousands (maybe even tens of thousands) of posts by now. Then again, welcome to the internet, I guess....
You'd think I'd learn my lesson by now. Buuuut... to some degree, I kind of enjoy all this debating. To a
point, at least. Once that point is reached, I may scale back my involvement in the discussion... Still, I agree that one thing that is perhaps getting lost in all this mess is that there really are some fine books being discussed here. Personally, I thought
Before Dishonor was pretty good. Not GREAT maybe, but good. And the follow-up,
Greater Than the Sum, was absolutely brilliant, IMO.
If it helps you feel better, think of it as a
novella. It's arty and makes you sound smart.
Ha! I like it. Very well; looks like this post is turning into another [Phony French Accent]
Novella.[/Phony French Accent]
Sorry, but I just have to repeat what I wrote before. If the main character can be killed off just like that, what will stop them from wasting more main characters when there's a need for an "effect"?
And this is the point that I was making before, with my list of the other series.
To be fair, NOTHING is preventing them from doing so, in much the same way nothing is preventing them from writing a 12-book epic about the Great Tribble Invasion or something equally nonsensical...nothing except what made them kill off Janeway in the first place - the desire to tell a good story. And, as you can see, Janeway's death is the exception rather than the rule; they clearly would not have done so unless they felt it was worthy, and as evidenced by the dozen or so cases where they brought main characters back into a place to continue impacting the ongoing narrative (including in Full Circle!) it's not a decision they took lightly.
Complain about Janeway's death all you want; it's a debatable decision, for damn sure. But don't act like it's part of some overall trend. It's very clear that this is an exception, not a rule.
Thrawn beat me to it here. All I will add is to consider that NOT killing a bunch of main characters would be the default position. The decision to kill off Janeway was a calculated one.
Lynx, really, the burden is on you to provide a compelling argument for why they
would do this thing, not on us to provide a compelling argument as to why they would continue doing what they've been doing for years.
If pocket books were clever, they'd leak information that Janeway turns up alive in the next book, because there would be a flood of people going to buy it...and lets be honest those people aren't going to be able to ask for a refund if they then read it and janeway stayed dead, with the words "April Fool" at the end...

Man, that is MEAN!
One other thought: does this not seem eerily familiar to Daniel Jackson? :O
Who...?
