A little torn on how to rank this one. It’s significantly better than Moments Asunder— Swallow “gets” how to write something like this in a way Ward apparently didn’t— but there are still a lot of baffling decisions that cut against the total effect.
It took me a while to read this one (between books 1 and 2 my wife gave birth to our first child! I’ve been fitting this in one chapter at a time for days…) and I honestly expected to come in here and see a lot more posts like this one. I’m glad I’m not the only one that feels this way; I 100% co-sign both of your posts.
Honestly, I’m pretty disappointed with this book. It’s not as bad as book one - at least Swallow did what he was trying to do much better than the sterile, plodding, poorly structured, generic slog of book one - but I’m still so confused about what this trilogy is trying to do in the first place. We sure do have a threat that’s serious enough for lots of main characters to die while fighting it. And … that’s it? So far? Like, Destiny was also a novel trilogy about an existential threat, but there was so much else in it. Four whole crews, 2.5 of which were brand new, full of characters with arcs and intriguing perspectives. 3/4 of them, in book 1, weren’t even interacting with the Borg invasion. Book 2 spent a lot of time on other stories and explorations. There are other examples, too … I’m used to these authors being capable of thinking based on not just plot but also character and theme, looking to new horizons and creative ideas, involving the complex political realities of the Typhon Pact etc, WHILE exploring the main thrust of the story (which has often been this kind of large scale threat; this might be bigger and badder but this kind of story has been done in TrekLit a few times). So why did they just give up on any other kind of storytelling goals for the first two entire books after coming up with the bad guy and the heroic deaths? These guys are better than this.
Like - one thing this book clearly is NOT trying to do: organically wrap up the ongoing character arcs from the LitVerse. The Titan crew is ignored, and by inference all have become morons, having recently seen Riker acting weird in Takedown and apparently learned nothing from it, spending the whole book not realizing that’s a possibility. The entirety of all the ongoing DS9 stories are ignored too, and/or flatly contradicted (Sisko’s mission, Ro/Quark’s relationship, and Kira/Odo’s relationship are all explicitly contradictory to where DRG3 left them, to say nothing of all the plot work he did that would’ve fit right into this story - Endalla, Rebecca - that was never mentioned at all). In a book filled with continuity references, to have DRG3’s work so soundly nullified felt less like simplification and more like deliberate slight. Did he do something to you guys to piss you off?
And not to harp on this too much but Destiny clearly shows that this is not a trade off you have to make for such a big crossover story. The Titan crew had a lot of interesting character work in that trilogy, despite being Lit-only characters.
There is also no focus on any of the complex galaxy-scale plotting that has been such a highlight of the lit verse. I’d much rather have had the Typhon Pact making life difficult amidst this climactic invasion with a competent Federation president trying to work out the complicated tangle than the dearth of creativity that establishes her as an idiot and has Riker play the traditional “I’m out of ideas and need plot filler conflict that just takes up space” role of Asshole Admiral Who Gets In The Way For No Reason. If the story needed additional conflict to raise the stakes, it could have built that off of all the actually interesting conflict that 20 years of stories have already established instead of character assassination for lazy cliches to fill space.
They just didn’t choose to focus on any of that LitVerse richness at all in Coda, which I’m pretty disappointed by, since that’s ostensibly the entire point of Coda? To pay tribute to and conclude all the 20 years of stories in this thriving universe? It’s weird to do that by completely ignoring most of it! There’s a stupid false conflict with Ro too. After all that time together no one would trust Ro with a phone call and a “I’d like to keep this on the down low but can we borrow a runabout without setting off mass hysteria”? All the added conflict here is artificial, none of it feels connected to the last 20 years of characterization.
Instead, we spend all our time with TV show mains and … Sam Bowers, which is cool, but why he is the only lit character with any focus seems pretty random. We give many of the DS9 characters heroic endings, which are strong writing and genuinely touching, but they’re ends for the characters in general without really being culminations of those characters’ stories. The Ro/Quark scene, for instance, would’ve been no less effecting if their relationship were back to just good friends like DRG3 established. The fact that that character work was ignored made the whole thing feel artificial just when it was trying to be its most human and emotional. And we have a lot more of that same goddamn fight scene against the Nagas! How many times have we had that same fight scene now? Ducane, alt Enterprise, Aventine, Enterprise, Aventine again, Robinson, Gorkon, Nog’s ship, Deep Space Nine / Aventine again… I get it! They’re scary! Can we do literally anything else now? Again: this isn’t an unreasonable ask; Destiny could have been 19 identical Borg fight scenes, each of which was terrifying but ultimately repetitive, and it sure wasn’t. If they could have better ideas then, why so uncreative now? For instance, there’s a whole Book 1 subplot here about the wormhole going nuts and Kira and Ro teaming up to manage the resulting Bajoran cultural / religious crisis that would have felt VERY DS9 relaunch. Leaving all of that for book 2 and then not showing us any of the DS9 crew reacting to the situation is a bizarre oversight.
Anyway, I’m glad that the thrilling heroics are working for so many of you, but there’s no thematic or character or political work here to give me something compelling to grab on to, and so all of it just feels like noise to me. Sound and fury without subtlety or purpose. Only the main character death scenes rose above, providing some true moments of catharsis and heroism, and even those were annoyingly tainted by the total elision of DRG3’s storylines. I think my favorite moment in the book was the one line reference to the transporter clones, which should’ve just been a cute aside.
Unfortunately, I think I’m not going to get what I’m looking for from book 3 either. Could not give less of a fuck about the Mirror Universe. Maybe Mack will prove me wrong, but it seems like the mission statement of this trilogy was to give all the TV show main characters a chance to fight something really scary for three books and often die, and not to actually do any kind of culmination, of character or theme or plot, of the 20 years of storytelling it is ostensibly tribute to. So far, the whole thing feels like a clumsily executed massive missed opportunity; this universe and these characters deserved more.