First off, I enjoyed the book and thought MBW did a fine job with character development on Pike and really captured the tortured spirit we see in The Cage.
But I have to agree with those who have brought out the Crimson Tide issue. It was immediately apparent to me, that inadvertently, it lined up almost perfectly, as both characters thought they were in the right, through the hearing and post hearing (I'm vague so as not to spoil).
I don't blame the writer, here, though. This should have been picked up in editing and massaged (I can think of about 10 ways to change it up so the basic outcome is the same, but the details vary, and possibly, make the emotional impact bigger). I'm also a little disappointed that this issue (having been brought up now three times in this thread) seems to be being ignored.
God knows, fiction is not easy (I'm in research right now on my first novel, a non-sci-fi, uh, historical piece centering on a slightly famous central character) and when you get into the bubble of writing, something like this would not be obvious to the writer (and in no way would I suggest that this is intentional or anything unethical by the writer) which is where line editing comes into play.
A few tweaks could have resolved an otherwise excellent novel.
And yes, for those who wonder, I don't just play an editor (non-fiction) on TV, I am one in real life. So please don't dare me to line edit Trek fiction — it'd be an awesome part-time gig for me.