So, just finished this second chapter of Coda which I've rated as Outstanding for a number of reasons as follows:
With any tie-in novel of a TV/film franchise, for me, a mark of a great writer is if I can 'hear' the actors in my head as I read their characters' dialogue on the page. If I can 'hear' the tone, the inflection, the nuance of how these actors may deliver these lines of dialogue on screen, when that happens, the novel is clicking on all cylinders for me.
This essentially being a DS9 novel, I felt that the entire time reading this. Bravo Mister Swallow, the dialogue throughout flowed and had rhythm & meaning & heart & loss and everything in between. I could 'hear' Brooks, Visitor, Shimmerman, etc as I read this wonderful brutal reunion of the DS9 crew. It added emotional depth to the actions and crisis those characters were enduring.
As for the deaths, well, a valiant day to die, a heroic sacrifice or two (or three) but the one death scene that got to me the most was:
Now I have yet to read some of the more recent DS9 novels so I was unaware of this pair as a semi-couple of sorts but their last moments here was heartfelt and tender, really moving. I had to put the book down for a few minutes after reading that.
Loved the passages of the sheer cosmic destruction wrought at the end, while there no special effects to be seen of it, the descriptions wonderfully conveyed the majesty, the horror and the loss of what happened.
That being said, while it may veer close to cliche, I did enjoy Nerys' and Picard's dual scenes of
'What have I done?' Trying to answer that question, from their distinct points of view, philosophical alongside principals, was great to read.
It was fun to read, it was brutal to read but I have to pause for the moment before diving into the last book, need to recuperate and digest this monster of a middle segment of this trilogy. Because if the hints and blurbs are right about where Picard and Co are going to lick their wounds, my, my, this is going to be a delicious twist....