Somebody's been watching too much BSG.
Is there such a thing?
The STAR TREK universe is essentially benign. There are bumps, certainly, and arguments between species but this was never meant to be a place where the good guys die a lot.
the whole POINT is overcoming obstacles through grit and intelligence.
one of.
character deaths should happen when they serve the story, not to wrap the milieu in a shell of potential doom.
As much as I adore BSG the premise is as different from Trek as night is from day. I completely agree with your statements above - Trek is about the hope of an evolved humanity - overcoming obstacles, good triumphing over evil, etc.
Sure, some may not find that realistic but there are other venues including BSG to explore the darker side of humanity.
but i am becoming concerned that trek lit is heading toward being more like new bsg.
now i liked most of new bsg.. well until recently since characters are dying at such a rate and others are acting so odd i almost dont care.
but overall i liked it and thought its tone was fine for it.
but it now seems to be a trend of turing the trek verse into this dark nasty death ridden place.
Well, it's a line to walk, I suppose.
You can't have adventure without danger. For humans (the bulk of the Trek-lit readership is, presumably human) "danger" translates into "potential pain," "injury" or "death."
In nearly all tales of adventure, even in many that are done "for kids," SOMEBODY dies.
For modern Star Trek, despite the initial "Best and the Brightest" premise of TOS, the bulk of the canon series have included or been focused on some large martial conflict. DS9 was almost entirely about two major wars. Three, if you count the Borg incursion that killed Sisko's wife and sent him, ultimately, to Bajor.
Then there was the Borg-centric VOYAGER and the Xindi/Suliban/time war-centric (and generally paranoic) ENTERPRISE.
Like it or not, for the past decade at least, talking about Star Trek meant you were talking about war. People die in those. Lots and lots of people die in those.
Some fans have grown up with Star Trek that has never been anything but the story of the Federation fending off brutal incursions by aggressive neighbors.
Personally, I'm in the camp that was dead sick of all that and waiting for the fun to start up again. Which it has (Thank GOD!).
BUT.
You can't ignore all those fans who want to know how things end and you can't just clap your hands and say "Basta! That was pretty bad. But now we're done. Those Borg guys sure know how to assimilate the hell out of some planets, huh? Whacky! Wonder where they went?" Etc.
You have to finish it out.
Also, if the only people who ever die in the books are new or "guest- stars," you create Red Shirt Syndrome, the longest running in-joke in Trek history. Nobody wants that. I hate watching a crime series on TV when there's a big guest star because I know, as soon as that star appears, he or she will be the focus of the story. It's like yelling "The butler did it!" at someone who's reading a book where whodunnit is the point.
The same is true for Star Trek deaths. Yes, they should be rare but, when they happen, they should happen to people we actually care about or there's no point.
While it's sad for a lot of people that Janeway's story ends on the downbeat, it's that sadness that gives the character meaning and weight. She matters to a whole slew of fans and now she's gone (sort of). So mourning and outrage are entirely appropriate responses.
It sucks. It's supposed to suck. It sucked when Kirk went bouncing down that mountain in such a stupid way. It sucked when Chewbacca took the Long Nap. It sucked when one of the Weasley twins got taken out. It's SUPPOSED to suck.
I killed a stack of characters in
SoD. Literally thousands of beings died, mostly screaming, over the course of the book. But only one death seems to have truly bothered anyone. The reason is that character mattered and the thousands of background players, necessary to the story, certainly, were just not important to the readership.
But death should be important. It should matter. Sadly, in fiction at least, it only really matters when someone, some character we cherish, dies. Red Shirts are a dime a dozen.
So, with Destiny, the battle-crazed kids got their Final Conflict. The Optimists got their Star Trek solution and the franchise can FINALLY put down the Borg and get on with Something Else.
It didn't have to be Janeway, certainly, but it was going to be somebody.