Started reading this book the other day and it's nice to follow up with another civilization first seen from the original series, this time the Gangsters of Iotia

. It was interesting to see that Miller had kept them gangsters in the future. I don't recall where I saw it, but I recall seeing something about how when they found McCoy's communicator that they imitated Starfleet based on that and all became Starfleet mini-me's (I don't think that was a novel but I can't remember where I heard that).
Anyway, I think Miller handled that well. I was never a fan of that idea, it just seemed to abrupt a change for any society. Maybe over several hundred years I could see that, but not in a few decades. And I liked his little added twist that the Iotians already had a bit of a propensity for gangster, or tribal, behavior in their history. They didn't just adopt gangster behavior based on the 'book' alone. I also liked that it wasn't a perfect recreation. For instance the cigars are basically useless props, and the women were never sexually subservient because the book didn't get into those elements in that much detail, and they adapted things to their own unique culture.
Anyway, curious to see where we go from here with that.
Rios is one of my favorite new characters from Picard. At times I liked Raffi, but sometimes characters like that irritate me. But Rios has a more complicated history.
I kept thinking he reminded me of someone and now that I'm reading the novel I realized he reminded me a bit of Captain Calhoun of the
Excalibur from the NF novels just a bit. They both have a nonchalant attitude and never say die attitude about them. Yet at the same time that's a bit of a cover because deep down they do have a firm sense of morality and ethics. They also are both quite the maverick (though in Rios' case that started more or less after he left Starfleet, whereas Calhoun never left Starfleet and has been a maverick basically since adulthood).