Sci, Steve Roby, and Kestrel have summed up my thoughts on all this very well, but there are a couple things I wanted to bring up:
As for the bolded part, of course it's possible. I dunno if that was - even in part - supposed to be a response to what I said about killing characters in stories I write, but I certainly didn't mean to imply that it's the only or best way to create drama. It's one of many ways, and absolutely shouldn't be done lightly or without careful consideration, but it shouldn't be avoided at all costs, either. Even if there are some fans who will hate it (and I have to be honest, Lynx... you are the first person I have "met" who is a fan of either sci-fi in general or Trek in particular who seems to have such a dislike of main character death, conceptually).
Actually... a question for you, on that note: I mentioned in my last post that I recently wrote a death scene for one of my characters in my big sci-fi epic. Let's say that someday, I publish this story (fingers crossed!!
), and you pick it up and really like it. You faithfully pick up subsequent books, eagerly following the story, and you develop a favorite character. That character is the one who's death I just wrote out. So you get to that part, and BAM, she dies.
Would your reaction be the same as it has been here? Do you stop reading my story, refusing to buy any further books that come out? Is this just a thing for you in general, "main character death = goodbye story", or was this case special?
Also, does the fact that the entire story is mine, all the characters were created by me, and all the decisions about things like who dies were all me... all of this was created and decided upon by a single person, unlike (obviously) the situation with Janeway, a character created years ago for a TV show, with the decision to kill her being made by a team of editors who had nothing to do with originally creating the character, and the writing of her actual death in turn falling to one of their authors... Does that make any difference? Would that make the character death in my story easier or harder to deal with?
I'm honestly curious here...
"Wasting Janeway" is subjective. She died, obviously, but whether or not that was a "waste" of her character is a matter of individual opinion. It goes without saying that you didn't like it, but there are others (myself included) who have stated that her death was an interesting plot development, and that instead of driving us away from TrekLit, it has helped to generate interest in Voyager novels where there was little or no such interest before.To take this back on topic again, the "Janeway situation" is somewhat different but I do think that those in charge of that action must have been aware of the fact that wasting Janeway would make many fans sad and angry.
As for telling good stories, "Fury" was definitely not a good story and when it comes to the books, masterpieces like "The Black Shore", "Marooned", "Her Klingon Soul" and many others shows that there is possible to tell good stories without killing off beloved main characters.
As for the bolded part, of course it's possible. I dunno if that was - even in part - supposed to be a response to what I said about killing characters in stories I write, but I certainly didn't mean to imply that it's the only or best way to create drama. It's one of many ways, and absolutely shouldn't be done lightly or without careful consideration, but it shouldn't be avoided at all costs, either. Even if there are some fans who will hate it (and I have to be honest, Lynx... you are the first person I have "met" who is a fan of either sci-fi in general or Trek in particular who seems to have such a dislike of main character death, conceptually).
Actually... a question for you, on that note: I mentioned in my last post that I recently wrote a death scene for one of my characters in my big sci-fi epic. Let's say that someday, I publish this story (fingers crossed!!

Would your reaction be the same as it has been here? Do you stop reading my story, refusing to buy any further books that come out? Is this just a thing for you in general, "main character death = goodbye story", or was this case special?
Also, does the fact that the entire story is mine, all the characters were created by me, and all the decisions about things like who dies were all me... all of this was created and decided upon by a single person, unlike (obviously) the situation with Janeway, a character created years ago for a TV show, with the decision to kill her being made by a team of editors who had nothing to do with originally creating the character, and the writing of her actual death in turn falling to one of their authors... Does that make any difference? Would that make the character death in my story easier or harder to deal with?
I'm honestly curious here...