I agree with you but I do feel that hints could have been given throughout the trilogy.
I'm pretty sure they were. You didn't immediately think "nanoprobes" upon hearing about the composition of the Caeliar bodies? I did. To say nothing of the attempted fusion of Valerian and Hernandez in Book II and the idea of joining the Caeliar gestalt, which immediately sounded to me like something akin to joining the Collective.
You're confusing Graylock with Mayor Foyle or Lieutenant Yacavino. Graylock never returned to Columbia after landing on Erigol.
Possible. Then how did they end up so early in time away from Hernandez and crew?
Your memory has very fundamentally failed you, because this was explained very, very clearly in Book I.
Graylock was part of the mutiny that managed to take several Caeliar scientists in the city-ship of Mantilis hostage by threatening to kill Kiona Thayer. Foyle and Yacavino beamed back aboard
Columbia along with a Caeliar named Artithon. Then the Big Kaboom happened and Erigol got all 'splody. The escaping city-ships entered some of the various subspace tunnels through space and time that had opened up in the area, as did
Columbia.
Columbia's vaporized all organic life and sent it to the Gamma Quadrant, where it crash-landed in a desert on a planet. The city-ship of Axion ended up in the Beta Quadrant in the 1500s CE. And the city-ship of Mantilis, which Graylock and the MACOs were on (and which Graylock had never left during the mutiny), and which several Caeliar scientists were on, was sent to the Delta Quadrant of almost seven thousand years in the past. The rest of the Caeliar residents of Mantilis died before it crash-landed on that planet in the Delta Quadrant (called Arehaz by the natives).
I'm not trying to be rude, but that's a major run-on sentence, and I'm not sure what you're asking. Are you saying that you had a problem believing that Hernandez would allow the Caeliar to try to "merge" with Valerian in an attempt to save her life? Why?
Yes. I'm saying I had a problem with this because why would a Starfleet Officer, allow an alien species to do something like that when the aliens themselves have no clue if it may or may not work?
It was explained very clearly in Book II that Hernandez did this because she was desperate to find a way to save Valerian, because she felt so fundamentally guilty about the deaths of the rest of her crew. It wasn't a
rational decision, but her motivations were made quite clear.
I understand that the Calier are compassioante but couldn't the Quoroum make an exception and allowed her to go back to Columbia to be treated? It seems like Hernandez had to be forced to trust them. And with such advanced technology, wouldn't it have been easier to just do a memory wipe so she has no memory of the Calier? I understand why Mack did it this way I just think it could have been executed better.
Erm, you're COMPLETELY confusing the plots of Books I and II.
Columbia's crew had already been killed and the ship lost to Hernandez by the time she allowed the Caeliar to attempt to merge Valerian into the gestalt. Axion, meanwhile, had been sent back in time to the 16th Century Beta Quadrant.
As for why the Caeliar didn't perform a memory wipe, they explained that in Book I: The Caeliar believed that the humans would detect the gaps in their memories and records and come back to investigate.
I thought it was obvious: All three feature Hernandez because she's sorta the most pivotal link in the chain between Humanity, the Caeliar, and the Borg. As for the Caeliar -- could anything they show really match your own imagination?
I have no complaint about Hernandez on the cover. I agree with that. And I have a pretty good imagination but it still would have been nice to see what they look like. Although having the captains on the cover was maybe a bit to much.
I'm not sure how you can say having the captains on the cover was too much when they were the central characters...