I'm not sure if there's a topic left to get off of, but, to go even further off-topic for a bit...
Uh, Mitch? Speaking as an author, I wouldn't find that insulting at all, if I were her. Put it this way, I think that the best novel I've written is The Art of the Impossible.
With the caveat that I've not read all of your novels and that I'm analyzing it several years after having last read it, I'm afraid that I have to disagree.
The Art of the Impossible was a truly wonderful novel, but it wasn't your best that I've read --
Articles of the Federation was. While
The Art of the Impossible was a brilliant book, I felt that it lacked the kind of focus that
Articles had. It works as an ensemble piece, but the override theme as I saw it -- the interaction of power politics and the cycle of life and death -- never quite congealed for me because I felt it lacked context. It's all well and good to talk about power politics amongst the Cardassians and Klingons and Romulans -- but what does it say about
us, about liberal democracy? And that's, again, not to insult
Art -- but I felt that it didn't quite reach the level that
Articles reached.
Articles of the Federation, on the other hand, was a novel that spoke directly to the question of what kind of society and what kind of politics we ought to build in liberal democracies. It was a novel with a clear focus, and it dealt directly with what quality of leadership really
means and what the responsibilities of a leader really are. One of my favorite scenes in that novel is where former Federation President Thelien, in an echo of a similar scene from
A Time for War, A Time for Peace, notes that how a president performs in reaction to circumstances that are completely unexpected is at least as important a measure as how they live up to their campaign promises. That bit of insight is incredibly accurate, let rarely noted in the mainstream media, I find. I also cheered when President Bacco announced that no one in the Federation would be imprisoned without due process of the law in a court system. The book was also a bit prescient -- though it was written long before it happened,
Articles was published at the same time that there was a conflict between Congressional Democrats and Republicans over Democratic filibusters of certain Republican appointees in the Senate that had prompted the Senate Republican leadership to propose abolishing the filibuster altogether, strangely mirroring
Articles' subplot about the Council blocking Bacco's appointees!
Articles also deserves credit for depicting an entirely new system of government that combines the best aspects of both the US and Westminster systems of democracy -- presidential independence and parliamentary accountability. I'm also a bit biased;
Articles of the Federation and the clear passion you displayed in it for good governance and leadership, for public service and the principles of liberal democracy, was one of the influences that prompted me to undertake an internship in the US Senate last year and to major in political science, and, indeed, to prompt me to decide to move to D.C. after graduation in search of a public service job there.
I have a few quibbles with one or two bits in it, but, ultimately, I think
Articles, with its smaller core cast, greater thematic focus, unique insights into good leadership qualities, and greater relevance to the citizens of liberal democracies, was a stronger work. Granted, to a point this is like comparing apples and oranges -- or, for that matter, like comparing a Tom Clancy movie to
The West Wing -- but I definitely think that
Articles of the Federation is the best novel you have yet written. (Key word being "yet," mind you.

)
Uh, Mitch? Speaking as an author, I wouldn't find that insulting at all, if I were her. Put it this way, I think that the best novel I've written is The Art of the Impossible. I've published 16 novels (and four novelizations) since then. I don't think that's a knock on those 20 books....
Ditto. Personally, I suspect I'll never top
Orion's Hounds.
I do not. I won't go into as much detail with
Orion's Hounds as I did with
Articles, but I will say that in reading
Orion's Hounds, I felt like I was reading a very good novel from a writer who hasn't written a lot of novels yet. Yours felt like a relatively young novelist's early work -- it was very good, but, like
Ex Machina, a bit raw (though less so than
EM), and I strongly suspect that as you keep writing, your work will continue to improve. And your work is already of good quality, to boot. I have no doubt that at some point, you'll be producing much better work than
Orion's Hounds if you keep at it. (And I say that, mind you, having not read any of your post-
OH work save
The Buried Age, so for all I know, you already have!)