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.
Incredibly well put. Wish I’d said that myself. Absolutely hit the nail on the head.An apocalypse has no dramatic value if the only problems it poses are logistical ones.
I wouldn't have expected to agree with that before reading them; I've been quite impressed with TrekLit's handling of darker themes in the past. But this is just so damn shallow that I'm finding it hard to find fault with your words. It isn't that it's dark, it's that it's meaningless.
Closing the wormhole has enormous practical and spiritual implications, but Kira and Ro both just jump happily on board with killing their gods. Kira is a bit shell-shocked afterward, but no effort is made to put the reader inside that anguish. I understand the Prophets wanted this to happen, but that shouldn’t make it feel this easy. An apocalypse has no dramatic value if the only problems it poses are logistical ones.
Speaking personally I don’t think this book solved any of my criticisms of the first book. It’s a less abjectly bad book, and of course it clarified some plot points, but that’s not the same thing. In any case, I think you’re misunderstanding the concern here. It’s not that there’s no possibility for the events described here to be meaningful; it’s that none of it feels meaningful because it’s being written about in a hollow, workmanlike way that’s below the usual standard of the novelists involved. The most likely way for these events to be meaningful in theory is already obvious; the litverse timeline will sacrifice itself to save the multiverse. But because the characters haven’t been show to grapple much with that, or with anything else, it doesn’t yet have any emotional weight. Mack may well do better on that front, but it won’t retroactively improve that aspect of these first two books.Several criticisms of this trilogy have been things for which waiting for the next book proved to be the solution. I can’t imagine how things will look meaningless at the end of book three. The meaning will come with the resolution, in which I fully expect all that our heroes havesuffered will count for something in the grand scheme of things.
I don’t think we’re being hyper critical. I think we’re expecting the same level of quality that these authors have taught us to expect based on the skill they showed in their own past work. There have been several prior treklit entries with this level of scope and circumstance and none of them forgot to contain thematically rich and character rich storytelling.Anyway, I just don't think it's realistic to be hyper-critical of something fo this scope and circumstance. Just my opinion though.
Was that Nemesis or These Are The Voyages…? Because I was hoping for at least something a little more satisfying than those.What, did you forget the last time we got a finale for the whole Rick Berman era of Trek?
Although it continues the characters and settings, I wouldn't consider the novelverse to be Rick Berman-style Trek. The novels do things he'd never have approved of.For me, it’s a whole lot of, “Who cares about the Devidians?” I’m just waiting for another villain reveal. Maybe I’m not just looking at this as a “lit-verse finale”, but as a finale for the whole Rick Berman era of Trek, and thus far, it’s not quite delivering.
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