Does Jean Lorrah continue to develop Vulcans as more friendly than most other stories do in IDIC Epidemic?
Is it worth considering that the small cast of characters give an impression that doesn't necessarily reflect Vulcan culture at large? It could be that Sorel and his family are more friendly than the norm.
The two books both feature Sorel, Corrigan, and T'Mir. Beyond that, I found they both portrayed Vulcans in the same overly friendly way. Why wouldn't they? This wasn't a time when Trek novelists were coordinating their efforts all that much or being required to keep their books consistent with each other. Each author tended to have their own individual interpretation of the universe. That was what made the '80s novels so interesting, that individuality of approach. Lorrah's novels had one flavor and view of the Trek universe, Diane Duane's had another, J.M. Dillard's had another, Vonda McIntyre's had yet another, etc.
On the other hand, I was struck by how it might have looked from her viewpoint, as an insult to Vulcan cultural norms; I thought it made sense when I read through that scene.
I never said it didn't make sense within the context of that story. Obviously it did, because it was
in that story. What I'm saying, one more time, is that people who think that negative portrayals of Vulcans never existed until
Enterprise are wrong, because TOS itself portrayed Vulcans in a far less idealized and glorified way than fans often assume.
As for the only "nice" Vulcans in TOS era, surely we can count Sarek as a character who grows significantly as a character to be included with Spock and image-of-Surak?
Yes, the Vulcans in the movies were portrayed as friendlier, but this is yet another instance where people mistakenly project movie-era portrayals of the characters (like Kirk being a rule-breaking maverick or McCoy saying "Dammit" all the time) back onto TOS. Once more, my point is that negative portrayals of Vulcans did exist as early as TOS itself, so what came later in the movies does not alter that fact; it just distorts people's memories of it.
The Vulcans-as-space-elves thing is something that I thought had only started after the Lord of the Rings movies became popular, and it never occurred to me that it might have been around earlier.
Lord of the Rings has been quite popular since it came out in the 1950s -- perhaps not as much among the general public as it was after the movies, but certainly among SF/fantasy readers and college students, i.e. much the same target audience as
Star Trek. Remember Leonard Nimoy's song "The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins?"
However, I must again point out that I wasn't being literal. "Space elves" is my own facetious shorthand for the way Lorrah's Vulcans were portrayed; I do not in any way mean to imply that Lorrah herself intended to present them that way.