Star Wars novels are total drek, and the writers seem to tell the same kind of stories all the time from what I hear, they don't have nearly the freedom ST writers have.
They have more freedom then they used too now that they are finally abandoning the movie eras.
They have to respect canon much more which something some writers love and some writers hate.
Crispin enjoyed writing SW wery much.
For my money, the problem in writing Star Wars novels is that they're incapable, either intentionally or by executive mandate, of letting the torch pass completely to the next generation. When the day needs to be saved, it's yet to be time to look to the new generation of heroes, but instead, they look to Luke Skywalker, Leia Organa, and Han Solo. I'll admit that Legacy of the Force had some rather big flaws, but I still like the fact that it was Jaina Solo who was the one to beat the bad guy.
But on the occasions where they try and shake up the status quo and let the next generation take on the major responsibilities, something happens (either reader backlash or an order from Lucasfilm to change things) to put the old heroes back in the spotlight, as if they're afraid of reducing the original characters to cameos, they'll lose readers. And, okay, sure, I understand that it could lose the casual reader who's only interested in Luke, Leia, Han, etc, but these characters are pushing sixty and seventy by the time of the latest novels, with a good forty plus stretch of their lives devoted to essentially nothing but keeping the galaxy together. Shouldn't by this point they WANT to let someone else shoulder the big responsibility of fighting the good fight?
Star Wars needs its DS9 equivalent, something that will open up the universe to allow stories not about the Skywalker family be told. I mean, the X-Wing novels were pretty popular, and the core group of the movies had nothing but cameos while the focus was on minor character Wedge and either even more minor characters or original ones, but they're essentially an exception in the overall scheme of things. Right now, Star Wars novels haven't had that expansion, so they keep telling stories about the Skywalker clan unless the time frame is before Phantom Menance. I'd like to think, though, that with novels like Crosscurrent and the forthcoming Riptide, they may be starting to get this, but I'm not exactly holding my breath at the moment.