Finally got around to finishing my response. I thought I'd have more time to work on this during my vacation earlier this month, but that ended up not being the case. Here we go!
1. How do you feel the Trek book line has done in the last 12-15 months?
I think the Trek book line is going well. Better than it was the year before. Please note I’m not really counting the January and February entries as I discussed one in last year’s thread and the other was just a reprint. Nearly every other book satisfied on some level. At the same time, none of the books were what I called excellent. They ranged from good to very good. Perhaps it was the stabilizing of an editorial vision for the line. Not remembering right now when the last change up was made at editor. Reliable series delivered the goods yet again. Shaky series continued to be shaky. A couple books were bad, but the good news there was that two of the three bad entries in 2011 I was expecting to not do so well. If that can be considered good news.
2. More specifically, what have you liked in regards to the entire Trek book line in that time? What were your three favorite Trek novels in that time and why?
I enjoyed the creation of at least one possible ongoing new series (Department of Temporal Investigation) and a heavy focus on an outgoing series (Vanguard). The former because I’ve long thought it would work as a (semi-?) ongoing series and the latter because any series as well loved as Vanguard deserves a good build-up in a short amount of time for its finale.
As for three favorite novels? I’m going to cheat a little and include a novella from late 2010 as my top pick because I did not read it until April 2011:
1. "Honor in the Night" (from
Shattered Light): Kind of a revelation. There isn’t much different in this particular universe from the prime universe and yet it opened up a world of possibilities that I had not previously considered. What it did was open my eyes to what must be a constant chess game between the Diplomatic Corp, Federation colony officials and the Klingons in the 23rd century in the wake of the Organian Treaty. As I’m currently reading Vanguard’s swan song, I found this novella worked as a great pilot for a new series in the same vein as Vanguard exploring the seldom seen “war” between the Klingons and the Federation and their efforts to expand under the watch of the Organians. I know Kevin Ryan’s books tackled this subject, but it’s been enough years that I think we could take another shot incorporating more of the recent continuity. That and I never actually read those books. I wish I had.
2.
Children of the Storm: The Voyager Re-Relaunch (or Voy-Re-Re if you will) continues its winning streak with Kristen Beyer’s third installment. Another epic tale following up on Destiny continued exploration not only of an interesting alien species but also further development of the Voyager Fleet. I have loved how the books have focused on different ships, this time the
Demeter. Shocking how we already lose one of the fleet vessels already. The book exemplified the Trek ideal while also providing adventure and a bit of mystery about future installments. Secret fighter craft? Cool. I hope we see the refit
Voyager soon. I do forget that the ship is supposed to look different now. I am surprised that had not been addressed in time for
Full Circle.
3.
Watching the Clock: For years I’ve wanted to see this one. And it’s great through and through. I loved all of the little details about this book, from the DTI Headquarters in England (I thought an artificial island HQ straddling the International Date Line would have been appropriate, but timing inter-office meetings would probably be a pain in the neck) to the agents themselves (a Suliban!) to the fact that a Starfleet vessel is assigned to the department. I loved the continuation of the Temporal Cold War and its real conclusion with the revealing of the “Sponsor’s” identity. The central relationship between Dulmur and Lucsly is fun and a time-tested and enjoyable dynamic. The theory on time travel in the Trek universe put forth by Christopher Bennett is new and makes sense given what we’ve seen.
3. Now, what did you disliked regarding to the Trek book line of the last year or so? What were your three least favorite or disappointing books and why?
There was truly little for me to dislike in most of 2011. I think that is because there weren’t any new Typhon Pact books during the time period that I am counting. And
Paths of Disharmony ended up being the best of the first batch of Typhon Pact books. I railed against aspects of the series that I don’t like in last year’s thread. I’m realizing that I just don’t care for most of the entire premise. There are days I honestly think I
hate a
lot of what the Typhon Pact books have done. Other days I’m indifferent and am willing to see where they go. I just don’t see a cold war as being very topical. I just read Storming Heaven right now and there’s a great line by Fisher to T’Prynn about a change for the better being traumatizing too. Wouldn’t that have been a more interesting idea to pursue in these post-Borg days.
My three choices for the worst and/or most disappointing books of 2011:
1.
Indistinguishable from Magic: Easily the worst Trek book I’ve read in awhile. Bear with me, I haven’t unleashed my full fury on this until now. It actually starts remarkably well. I liked the idea behind the title. I was glad to see a Geordi-centric novel for a change. For the most part I liked the
Challenger crew. However, the nitpicks just built and built until the book reached a tipping point and just poured over the edge.
I’m not sure where to begin. Probably with the small universe syndrome. Completely unnecessary. As soon as we meet Dr. Ogawa, I remembered a conversation on this forum years ago about how someone thought it lame that just because Ogawa was a nurse, she must therefore want to move up to be a doctor. I seem to recall even Ogawa clarifying her opinion on the matter. When even the characters don’t like what is being done with them, something is wrong. Reg transported from the Delta Quadrant? Ridiculous. Leah Brahms is back. In a book stuffed full with references to other shows and books, you’d think the one that actually tells us that she is single again would have been in there. Nope. I genuinely thought they were carrying on an extra-marital affair for awhile there.
Hey Scotty. You have the SCE to run, and you’d rather be an engineer than be in command of a starship (as evidenced in the TNG episode that brought you back), but for some reason you’re in command of this mission. I should have noticed it earlier, but it’s not until the end that I realize you’ve been set up for martyrdom the entire time. The one lousy TOS character whose presence in the late 24th century made the most sense of anyone and they get rid of him. He had a job that gave him purpose and befit a man of his experience. He was also technically the youngster of the surviving TOS crew. And they kill him off pulling some technobabble crap that I recall was a stretch to really need him to begin with. Seriously, f*ck you book. I read this book a year ago and promptly tried to forget it, but I’m amazed at how quickly I can summon my rage towards this novel.
Second, the plots. I say plots because this is two completely different books in one. At some point early in the process, you’d think someone would have flagged this as an extraordinarily bad idea. The last time I saw this was in
Mystery Science Theater 3000. The plots themselves are contrived. More small universe as Bok and Rasmussen seemingly throw together a plot within days to seize an NX-class vessel.. for something. I don’t even remember now. The second solves the mystery of the Hera and it made me wish it had stayed a mystery. If Scotty was one minor injury away from his life being threatened, why the hell is he even cleared for duty to begin with? Then again, Scotty had to be hoisted onto the cross so that Geordi could take command, seemingly just because we saw it in some random alternate future that never happened. Otherwise, why would the SCE have a Galaxy-Class starship as a test bed vessel in this post-Destiny era? I noticed the 1701-E is off its reconstruction mission already. I guess everything is back to normal?
When the moss zombies appeared, I almost threw the book across the room.
Lastly, it’s been said before, but it needs to be said again. The copy editing was atrocious. One character completely changed names between three pages. Not just a different spelling, but a completely different name. I’ve never seen that. Confusing to say the least.
2.
To Brave the Storm: A pretty disappointing finale to the Earth-Romulan War. I’m not sure why this trilogy was shrunk to a duology. Maybe because the first book was pretty bad too.
To Brave the Storm was a truncated end to one of the most anticipated appearances in the Trek literature: The Earth-Romulan War. The book is so condensed that a Romulan attack on Earth that levels Madrid and Tunis is skipped over and recounted after the fact. This after a pretty decent build-up. Unbelievable. Again I’m not remembering much about this book at this point. All I remember are the gaps where the story should have been: the things we should have seen. Like the
Enterprise’s decommissioning for one thing. The book is admittedly better than the first one, but Michael Martin is still struggling. Maybe he’s improving. At least the book ends on the right note.
3.
Blind Man’s Bluff: Thankfully not as atrocious as
Treason. But it also feels hopelessly half-formed. One of the villains of the book early on dissects Calhoun’s blind spots when it comes to loyalty. It’s a great perspective on the captain long made invincible by the character’s very loving author. I was jazzed after that chapter, thinking we were going to see Calhoun hit by a shocking betrayal that would actually leave him speechless and reeling. Nope. That really doesn’t happen. At least not in this book although it’s hinted that it could happen later. That villain that thought she had Calhoun’s number is taken down without much sweat from Mac. The book does end on a kind of tasteless genocidal cliffhanger though.
4. What new recurring trends or themes in the last 12-15 months have you picked up on?
About the only consistency that I detected was a willingness to try new things. And it paid off well. From the DTI novel to a book of Vanguard novellas to another Lost Era installment. I’m hoping it’s reflective of a steadier editorial hand that is ready to put its stamp on the line.
5. What editorial decisions from the last 12-15 months have you like? Disliked?
It’s interesting to see the return of the ebooks. However I don’t really hold out hope that the SCE will return any time soon. My only concern is if and when we’ll get the new ebooks in paperback. Seeing as how we’re still waiting on
Slings & Arrows not to mention actually finishing SCE in paperback. Is this current year the first time in awhile where we’re not getting any trade paperbacks?
I also praise the decision to end Vanguard. It’s a gutsy decision considering the adoration the Treklit crowd has afforded it. They could have milked it for all its worth, like New Frontier. That series is a shell of what it used to be and with the goofy “comic book” approach to Trek that is seemingly going on without end, it’s lost much of its meaning. With Vanguard, we’ll have eight great installments of what has been one of the most fascinating tales in all of Trekdom. That means people can revisit it easily whenever they want. It was surreal watching it all come to an end, but I’m glad the editors have learned that a story with a definitive end gives it more meaning and in my opinion focuses the writers and their stories on what’s important.
6. What would you change in the Trek book line? Everything? Nothing? Be it production choices (artwork, type of book) or story editorial decisions?
I think I would wrap up the Typhon Pact books and move on to something else. I know it won’t happen, but whatever. Put
Slings & Arrows out in trade paperback before even I start to forget it existed, which I’m starting to. Same for the SCE.
I’d like to see another series fill the void left by Vanguard. Just so long as it’s not the
Aventine. The artwork this last year has been interesting. I do wish the Valeris book had the old fashion Lost Era artwork design, but that’s getting to be so long ago now that I guess I understand why they don’t use it anymore. It’s just that those covers were just about perfect.
It’s interesting how we’re now getting well into the second decade of the “book continuity.” I’m forgetting a lot of details from those earlier books. It’s hard to believe that it’s been that long now since DS9R’s
Avatar. I guess I won’t comment much on that series’ status until I’ve read the upcoming duology. My opinion on the state of the DS9R I think is well known, so we’ll just have to wait and see on that one.
Side note: with the Ships of the Lines calendar, can we permanently ban the shots of the
Enterprise in drydock? Talk about overdone. At the same time, I greatly enjoy how outside artists have contributed so much to the look of the new book-only series like the Voyager Fleet. I can’t wait to see more of those!