Allyn Gibson said:
I open a thread on the "Vanguard Controversy," and I was expecting something on the pro-Iraq politics of the series.
I have said this before, and it seems I must say it again:
There are no "pro-Iraq" politics in
Vanguard. Regardless of what you inferred, Allyn, it is not there, and your analogy is, at best, a reach. Anyone who has read my TNG novels
A Time to Kill and
A Time to Heal will know that your assertion strains credibility.
Yes, T'Prynn took ethically and morally questionable actions to prevent a conflict, and her C.O., trusted her too much and didn't ask how she got things done. All of this was setup for the eventual blowback that occurs in
Summon the Thunder and
Reap the Whirlwind.
The metaphor that
was intended in
Harbinger was for the Dan Rather fiasco, in which a reporter proceeds with a story that, despite being basically true, is undermined by evidence that later is revealed to have been fabricated (possibly by people who wanted the story neutralized). Even though lots of people know the
story is still factual, because the "evidence" is tainted, the reporter is robbed of credibility and the botched evidence is used as an excuse to ignore the essentially true nature of the story.
As for the story elements that spurred The Lonely Squire to return the books, I feel no need to apologize for my narrative choices. I intended those characters to be complex, mixtures of good and bad, fusions of heroic and flawed, selfish and noble. An adultress who is brave enough to hold her post to the final moment of a battle. A good reporter in search of truth who is living a lie. A woman tasked with providing security who sets in motion a slow-action domino effect that will cause more harm than it prevented. And so on.
I return you all now to your round-robin tirades. Enjoy, and thanks for arguing.
