I guess that is where we differ on opinions. I don't see a change of relationship as destructive. It does enhance the canon by exploring the unexplored feelings that Janeway & Chakotay showed on the tv series.
Death however is destructive since it somewhat more permanent (however permanent death in Star Trek, or any Scifi is ofter such a relative term/fluid concept).
Ok; so a new relationship is constructive, but a death of a captain is destructive. I'm still curious, where do you draw the line? Let me give you some scenarios.
(Note: spoilers, for several books more than 1 year old)
1) Death of a main, canon character in the main, canon work. Kirk, Data, Trip, Yar, Wesley (if Janeway counts he counts), Kes, Jadzia Dax, Sisko. Constructive or destructive?
2) Death of a minor, canon character in the non-canon work. Dr. Selar, Admiral Paris, Tuvok's son, TOS's transporter dude, mirror universe characters, and the list goes on. Constructive or destructive?
3) Death of a major, non-canon character in the non-canon work. New Frontier, SCE, IKS Gorkon, Vanguard, Titan (sort of), and the TNG & Voyager Relaunches have all killed off at least one new major character. Constructive or destructive? What if the new character was my favorite character, that I liked even more than the onscreen ones? Does that change your answer?
4) Plot elements established in canon that are ignored. Right after Voyager returns from the DQ, in the first book, Tuvok's mental condition is healed and the Chakotay/Seven relationship is nullified, eliminating plot opportunities & destroying the canon show creators' original intent. Martin Madden, originally intended to be Picard's first officer, was never used in the books (ok, possibly bad example, that isn't canon). Constructive or destructive?
5) Doing what makes sense based on on-screen events, even if it's a Big Huge Deal. In Endgame, Janeway destroys the Borg transwarp hub. In Destiny, the Borg invade the Federation, intent on destroying it, because between Picard & Janeway humans have proven to be too difficult to assimilate. This builds directly off of canon situations and actions; in your own words, this "enhances already was in canon, or explores deeper what was shown in canon." It results in, as would be realistic, the deaths of several of the minor characters listed above in #2. Constructive or destructive?
6) And one last hypothetical situation - imagine your least favorite character on your least favorite Trek TV show, and imagine they die in the books, in the most heroic character-appropriate amazing sacrifice that you can think of. Is your reaction the same as your reaction to Janeway's death?
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