I've never understood the bizarre hatred some Star Trek fans feel for stories that are not considered canon. The novels are licensed by CBS/Paramount which means those stories are just as real as the TV episodes and movies.
Well, only in the sense that none of them are real, since it's all fiction. Licensing does not at all mean that tie-ins have equal weight to the screen canon; it simply means that the publishers have the owner's permission to publish and sell them. A license is a business contract to create and market a product. It's not about whether the product "counts," it's just about permission to use the intellectual property. You can get a license to put Spock's face on a lunchbox, but that doesn't mean the lunchbox is part of Federation history.
After all, Pocket, IDW, and the makers of Star Trek Online are all licensed to create and market Star Trek fiction, but they all contradict each other's continuities. None of them is "real" in each other's continuity; all they have in common is consistency with the onscreen material. Tie-ins are conjectures based on the canon. They're might-have-beens. But since the canon itself is equally a might-have-been, since it's all totally invented and imaginary anyway, it doesn't matter if two different unreal stories are consistent with each other, as long as they're both entertaining.