I finally completed this novel. It took me a lot longer than usual, but not because it was a bad book. On the contrary, I enjoyed it quite a bit and rated it 'above average.' My father passed away suddenly in early December and I've been dealing with some of what I'll call mid-life crises since then. In any event, it caused me to slack off on reading quite a bit for a few weeks. I even resorted to watching Hallmark movies to make myself feel better (those movies are insidious, BTW, they suck me in even though I have the plot figured out within 5 minutes, it's like I have to see if the guy gets the girl even though I know they always do...and I've developed quite the fan crush on Lacey Chabert



).
Anyway

, regarding the novel. It was a good read. I won't go into plot details as prior comments seem to have that covered, and it's a timely story as others have noted regarding the recent election so I won't belabor those points again. I'll just stick to my own opinion of the story. Greg did a good job covering the 3 storylines...mostly. At the start there was a great balance between Vok, Ozalor and Braco, in fact there was an orderly, pretty symmetric story line there, no one dominating the other, and yet not conflicting either. However, my only complaint, and the main thing that made me knock it down a bit from an excellent book, is that for a while Ozalor seems to be forgotten. There is a period of time when Spock learns McCoy might be there until Spock gets there that we hear nothing about McCoy or the progress he's making. Also, there is some groundbreaking news that maybe they didn't all arise from Braco as initially suggested--but it comes at the end of the book and we are left to wonder how the news will be taken. I was a bit disappointed with that. Now, in fairness, all stories end with a bit of a cliffhanger. What happens next? And most of the time we are never told. But that is a significant plot development I thought that greatly affects the local politics and it would have been interesting to see that developed further.
NOW, if this were a case where this was the first book of a duology or trilogy, where we knew a sequel book was going to take that further, that wouldn't be a big deal. It's a juicy plot that has a lot of potential and I'd just like to see that developed further.
That being said, I'd love to see such a sequel be written by Greg (or anyone I suppose that might want to take it further) to follow up on that. However, I'm not holding my breath for that.
But those are still relatively minor critiques. I still thought it was above average. The story was engaging, relevant even to our current events, and the characters were interesting. And I like that Greg is an eternal optimist in most of his stories. And he (and Christopher for that matter), generally paint our main Star Trek characters in a positive light, showing us the best they all have to offer. And they do it without being sappy or indulgent. Each character knows their strengths
and weaknesses and shows us why we like those characters so much. It lets us see humanity at its best, when we try to be the best version of ourselves as possible, despite our imperfections.
And Greg even sneaks in a little continuity world building, since the Enterprise is nearing its 5 year mission, and giving us a potential in-story explanation of why the crew remains together for so long. Something that is probably improbable, but he gives them a plausible reason for why that might be. However long the odds of that are.