I have read MANY Trek books that could have been written by Michael Moore, but I don't complain; I just enjoy the story for what it is...
Rob
Examples please, and dedication pages don't count.
I have three examples that come to mind immediately, two of an anti-religious nature and one of a far-left political nature; however, I went years without reading Treklit after "Olympus Descending." Since then, I've only read the Treklit books sporadically, and in MOST cases only when I could find said books at used book stores.
Some of you may think these things are not offensive; however, there is no arguing that they are ideologically charged.
--The "A Time To..." series and the very thinly veiled Bush assassination fantasy with Min Zife. That one just about made me SICK. <SNIP> And the "A Time To..." thing even worse because it seemed like a WISH for something bad to happen to Bush, like a delight in it. Oh yeah, there was a little bit of "Oh, bad Section 31! BAD!" at the end, but it really felt like an attempt to put lipstick on a pig.
I've said it before and I'll say it again: You're supposed to feel sick about President Zife's assassination. The narrative is not depicting his assassination as a good thing. Hell, you're not even supposed to walk away from the damn thing feeling good about the idea of him being forced from office -- Picard goes and calls it the darkest day in the Federation's history. You're certainly not supposed to think of his assassination as a good thing -- and to take blatant portions of the narrative that make it clear that the assassination is a bad thing ("the merciless hands of Section 31") and claim it's nothing more than a rhetorical slap on the wrist is a fundamentally dishonest way to depict the narrative.