I'm done with this thread.
This is fiction by committee, with a big sticker on the front cover that says, "This story arc has a guaranteed happy ending".
Regarding this, I would just like to ask you and the others who want to see main characters killed off at random a question:
If you see the killing off or destruction of main characters as necessary for a good story, how come that you became Star trek fans in the first place and still are Star Trek fans?
I mean, Picard and his band (except Yar who was dumped because the actress wanted to leave) survived for more than seven years without anyone killed off. Kirk did survive in all stories from the mid-sixties to the controversial decision to kill him off in "Generations". How could you stand that?
Just curious.
This is a completely legitimate and interesting question; thank you for asking it, and trying to be open minded about this. I can't answer it for everyone, but I certainly can answer it for me.
For one thing, death was always sort of a possibility, since main characters did die or transcend every so often...not every day, no, but there are a couple major character (or major recurring character) deaths in each show. Dax, Kes, Yar, Wesley, etc, as well as some minor ones like Ziyal make a difference to that realism. But that's a little beside the point, actually, because you're totally right - I didn't feel that Star Trek really did put their characters in the kind of peril that I wanted.
And that was, in fact, my biggest complaint with Star Trek - the dreaded reset button. I adored stories like Year Of Hell, because they felt like what the shows should've actually been like, but hated when they ended and everything reset. There were enough neat ideas and things bouncing around the TV shows that I liked them when I was younger, but after getting into high school and beyond and watching shows that challenged and surprised me more, I started to lose interest in Star Trek a lot. There were maybe a half-dozen episodes per year that really had the kind of arc-based, character-changing stories I really desired, and the rest was high quality filler, but filler nonetheless.
The problem with the books pre-Marco is that, mostly, they just made more filler, and by necessity I think. The shows were, after all, still on the air. But even while falling out of love with Trek as a whole, I latched on to the DS9 relaunch and New Frontier, precisely because in those series I felt that characters could be in peril, etc. Once all the other series started doing the same things, even if just with supporting or book-only characters, I started re-adopting the rest of the series, and now that they're all so unified and main characters are in peril too, I'm totally on board with everything.
I mean, think of it this way - each year, on Star Trek, there would be one or two episodes that would really Change Something, be it a death or whatever. They weren't the only thing worth watching, the standalones filled in characters and situations around them of course, but I always felt the Big Episodes were what kept me watching. Now, we get novels for each series only once or twice a year...and, to my delight, they're the Big Stories! Yes, the series' lose a little bit of their character by only focusing on the extremely powerful or large-scale moments (the accusation of Star Trek just becoming a series of conflicts is I think unjust but also understandable), but I think the writers do a pretty good job of including those smaller moments within the narrative for the most part. The way I see it is that it's like each book is the 6 best episodes of each season all smooshed together, which is outstanding, but I realize that you do lose the other 18 and the high points that would've come with them too, if that makes any sense.
So, as I've said from the beginning, I can see the other side to this argument, I really can. But for ME, it's as though they've taken the heart and soul of the best stories that the TV show could've told, raised the stakes and the power of the storytelling, and stripped away the filler episodes that I tended to find useless. There are downsides to that approach of course, I recognize that, but for ME just about every single book published these days is focusing on the kinds of stories I always loved best in the TV show.
Or, to put it another way, I really feel as though they've taken the TV shows, filled in a bunch of holes to make it one thriving universe, and really turned it into a BOOK SERIES. Not just a series of tie-in novels that reflect on the universe, but something that feels natively like a series of novels - imagined that way, planned that way, etc. On a TV show, there are expectations of certain regulars being in every episode, chronological order, etc. For the novels, they can have casts as big or small as they like, stories not hampered by time limit or budget, and much greater flexibility in timeline and character use, all of which they're using to their fullest extents.
Star Trek the TV series was a fantastic TV series, but while the TV series on, the books were just (to me) more of a fantastic TV series but in book form. Now, the books are a fantastic book series, period. The difference is subtle, but definite. I don't want more books that read like novelized mid-season episodes; I want more books that read like books.