I'm not "faulting" anyone, I'm stating what I don't like. I can actually not like an aspect of a book, show, series and have an opinion based on what I've researched on it.I might be wrong about the intent of the writer. I'm not "wrong" about how I feel because that's my OPINION of how many previous Trek (and Star Wars) books read FOR ME.
But opinions are only as good as the information they're based on, and sensible people are open to changing their opinions when new information is provided. You've stated overtly that you lack information on the subject here, so how can you fault us for trying to provide you with more information and show you how your opinions are based on incomplete knowledge and incorrect assumptions?
The Typhon Pact concept doesn't sit well with me.
I'll accept that as a fair assesment.But the results are different depending on what era of Trek Lit you're drawing from. It's gone through its ups and downs in the thirty-plus years that Pocket has held the license. After a "golden age" in the mid-'80s, it came under tighter restrictions after TNG and the other series came along, so that the content that came out for most of the '90s tended to be routine and unambitious, with only the occasional high point. But in the 2000s, with the old restrictions on continuity and innovation removed, the books entered a renaissance, a new era of interconnectedness and sophistication. The books edited by Marco Palmieri, such as the post-finale DS9 novels, Titan, The Lost Era, and Vanguard, were particularly praised for their quality. Vanguard is a distinctive series in its own way, but in a lot of ways it's representative of the approach and tone of a lot of modern Trek Lit.It's not unfounded. I haven't just read 1, 2, or 3 Trek books in my lifetime, l've read or tried to read at least 20 different Trek books in the past 20yrs either by different authors, or ones I like or am familiar with. I find many of them read like fan-fics. Every now and then, I find a diamond in the rough, like Vanguard, but more often than not, I feel Trek books are a let-down. You know what they say about doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results?
So depending on when the books you've sampled were published, you may be missing out on a lot of information about where Trek Lit is in the 21st century.
**Goes off to start Stitch in Time