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Spoilers PIC: Rogue Elements by John Jackson Miller Review Thread

Rate PIC: Rogue Elements

  • Outstanding

    Votes: 20 69.0%
  • Above Average

    Votes: 6 20.7%
  • Average

    Votes: 2 6.9%
  • Below Average

    Votes: 1 3.4%
  • Poor

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    29
I don't recall, did the the Iotians end up joining the Federation at some point. Miller didn't talk a lot about the planet itself and I was curious if that came up. I can't remember.

The SCE series had an Iotian member of Starfleet, but I don't know if Iotia was referred to there as a member world (not a requirement for Starfleet membership, cf. Worf, Ro, etc.).
 
Nope, having a Federation member or colony as a homeworld isn't a requirement for entrance into Starfleet. Ro, Nog, Worf, and more besides as precedents for that.
 
Having just watched the season premier of season 2 shortly after reading this book I think it really helped me believe where Rios is in season 2.
With what we saw of him in Season 1 and having only watched it once I think I’d have struggled. Having spent more time with him here helped.
 
I think part of what I liked about this is that Rios had no intention of becoming Han Solo but Raffi kind of pushed him into it, which fits Raffi's well-intentioned but awful results.

One question I do have, though, is, "WAS Rios trying to steal the ship in the beginning?"

Yes, that certainly makes more sense. The original premise of the episode is anthropologically implausible and rooted in ethnocentric assumptions about why cultures adopt outside ideas. Just being blindly imitative makes no sense; who were the Iotians supposed to have imitated before first contact? Cultures adopt new ideas if it suits their own purposes, or at least those of a faction within the culture. I figure that some Iotian subculture that already had mobster-like customs latched onto The Book as "proof" that their ways were endorsed by a higher power, adopting its trappings to advance their own influence until their ways became dominant. And by a century later, those customs had become intrinsic to their culture, and they wouldn't have just mindlessly tossed them aside for no reason.

Amusingly, George R.R. Martin once drew a comparison between feudal society and gangsters. I had the interesting idea the Iotians were actually Medieval in nature by the time the Horizon arrived and they saw things like "Bosses", gangsters, and so on through the lens of a society that was already based on organized violence, protection money, and so on but combined with 1920s technology as well as services. Which, to me, makes a lot more sense than if they'd been completely different.

Really, the ending of "A Piece of the Action" makes more sense than some other Prime Directive stories, because it has Kirk accept that this is just the way the Iotians are now, and he works within their cultural norms to help them reform their society on their own terms, rather than saying "No, you must revert to the 'pure' culture you had before our 'contamination'" (which is nonsense, because every culture interacts with others and "purity" is a myth).

I admit I had to wonder how the Federation is going to react to being told they were going to receive tribute from a Pre-Warp society.

I wondered if that was sort of a metatextual nod to how the episode's gangster culture was toned down for '60s broadcast standards, with all the seedier sexual elements censored out.

I admit I was surprised to have seen that as an element in the book and so strong in the book. After all, I would have thought that it seemed sanitizing the actual culture. However, I think it was an interesting twist by the end as we see how cultures interpret things for their own way versus being blindly immitative.
 
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Voted above average. Liked the story a lot. We didn't learn much personal background of Rios, though. Considering what happened to the character I'm afraid some aspects of his life will remain undiscovered....
 
I just finished the audiobook last night. And, yeah, it felt like there were more endings than in Peter Jackson's "Return of the King".

It felt like an entire 10-episode streaming series novelized into a single book. Episodic and, kinda, endless. This confirms my decision to step away from Treklit. It's simply not being written with me in mind any more. I don't begrudge people who enjoy it their pleasure, but I'm not having fun with 140,000-word Star Trek novels any longer.
 
In the Eaglemoss/Hero Collector fan group on Facebook, user Chris Newstead posted a version of La Sirena from the novels!
Facebook link (post may not be public): https://www.facebook.com/groups/eaglemossstartrekfangroup/permalink/3469098323413486/

65669FBB-FB7D-4FDD-AADF-303C8A5714D1.jpeg
Which one is it?
Chris Newstead said:
The red is original. The confederation is the silver grey one. The battered and shot up one is Seven of Nines ranger version. And the drab grey with no engine pods is from the novel "Rogue Elements"

Cross-posted from the “Picture the Novelverse” thread. Link: https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/picture-the-novelverse-characters-ships-and-more.223738/page-36
 
I finished reading last night the “Star Trek: Picard” novel, Rogue Elements (2021), by John Jackson Miller. It is the third tie-in novel to that particular series.

Like with the previous two (The Last Best Hope and The Dark Veil), Rogue Elements is another prequel novel taking place entirely prior to the events of the first season of “Picard”.

This one focuses on the character of Cristóbal Rios right as he is acquiring his cargo freighter, La Sirena.

He is immediately in debt to the previous owner, though, and has to pay them off. Those owners just happen to be Iotians, from the same planet that Captain Kirk and the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise discovered a century earlier that had patterned their entire civilization on a book about the Prohibition era mobs of Earth’s history. Which makes this more of a Star Trek the original series sequel in many ways than a Picard prequel (although we do get scenes of Rios communicating with Raffi, another “Picard” character, and Jackson does indeed fit bits of Jean-Luc Picard into the novel as well, even though Rios and Picard don’t actually meet until in the streaming tv series).

But then there are also TNG elements (a particularly nasty nemesis from a very memorable episode of TNG is a major character here), and there are also call backs to Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.

I’m not going to go into any more detail than that here so as not to give away everything. I will say that I enjoyed this novel a lot. Aside from the very ending being a tad bit contrived (where Miller brings all of the various plot threads together and reveals what’s really been going on), this is a real fun read. Miller weaves the TOS and TNG callbacks in expertly and, more importantly, manages to make Rios a much more interesting character than we saw most of the time on the actual “Star Trek: Picard” series. Enough so that I’d actually like to see another Captain Rios novel by Miller (although that’s very unlikely at this point).

I gave Rogue Elements four out of five stars on GoodReads.

My next two Star Trek novels that I plan on reading are also by Miller. His “Star Trek: Discovery” novel, The Enterprise War (2019), which shows up what Captain Pike and the Enterprise were doing during the Federation-Klingon war in “Discovery” season one, and the first “Star Trek: Strange New Worlds” novel, The High Country, which just came out this year. So, I’m on a bit of a John Jackson Miller marathon here.

— David Young
 
God I loved this book! I wish it could have been longer. I fell in love with all the characters! The twists and turns kept me guessing! I love mr millers writing style and really loved the call backs. After reading the high country and this one I think I have an another favorite writer!
 
Yes John Jackson Miller's Star trek books are really good.I hope he'll write more Star Trek books in the future again.
 
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