i don't think any Trek novel has ever gone OTT in its depiction of sex or violence and my 'more please' comment earlier on was nothing more than a joke.
I apologise if I took it more seriously than you intended.

i don't think any Trek novel has ever gone OTT in its depiction of sex or violence and my 'more please' comment earlier on was nothing more than a joke.
It's important to me never to depict violence as something casual or desirable, or to depict death without acknowledging the loss. I try not to depict violence or killing as the solution to a problem, or as something without consequences. To me, one of the key things that distinguishes heroes from villains is that villains have no problem with killing while heroes treat it as an absolute last resort and regret it rather than celebrating it. So my heroes tend not to be violent if they can help it, whereas I can portray villains as absolutely brutal. I don't want to sanitize violence when I do depict it. It should be unpleasant to read about.
Christopher, knowing your perspective on violence, reading your Shards and Shadows story was even more brutal for me than it would have been if I hadn't known you were the writer. I knew that you felt pain when you write violence... I found I wasn't just feeling the pain of the story itself, I was also feeling pain thinking of what I thought you'd gone through writing it. Do you have any thoughts you'd want to share about the experience of writing the violence of that story?
And a lot of it was from Tuvok's perspective, so not a lot of strong feelings to channel there.
Christopher, knowing your perspective on violence, reading your Shards and Shadows story was even more brutal for me than it would have been if I hadn't known you were the writer. I knew that you felt pain when you write violence... I found I wasn't just feeling the pain of the story itself, I was also feeling pain thinking of what I thought you'd gone through writing it. Do you have any thoughts you'd want to share about the experience of writing the violence of that story?
Well, as I said, it depends on the emotions the viewpoint character is feeling toward it, because I have to try to imagine what it would feel like in order to describe the character's reactions effectively. So what's hardest for me is being in the mindset of the person who's actually inflicting the violence and yet has enough compassion to care about the harm being done. I don't think that happened at any point in "Empathy." Most of it was from the perspective of people who cared but were only witnessing the violence rather than inflicting it, or from the perspective of people who didn't care about the people they hurt or killed. And a lot of it was from Tuvok's perspective, so not a lot of strong feelings to channel there.
I, on the other hand, would argue that ST09 did depict the emotional consequences of the destruction of Vulcan as well as it possibly could have within the conceits of a 2-hour action film.
It was good research for that Final Destination book.
I'm just not mad on rape/sexual assault scenes.
It was good research for that Final Destination book.
Based on the movie series of the same name? Do tell!
The mainline Tuvok is, but this is the MU Tuvok (seen in DS9's "Through the Looking Glass," as well as my own The Mirror-Scaled Serpent and two stories in Shards and Shadows).And a lot of it was from Tuvok's perspective, so not a lot of strong feelings to channel there.
Eh? But he's practically a psycho by Vulcan standards!
Just out of interest, what of Ree, whose attitude towards killing others is different in many significant ways due to his being Pahkwa-thanh, as you have outlined in some detail in other novels?
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