Indeed. It's a gift that the Trek Literature continuity that ran 2001-2019 receives a wrap-up instead of just ending.
Yes, certainly true. Once Picard had come out and was almost totally incompatible with the litverse (at least from the
Destiny series on), I figured, that was it. I had thought at least
Collateral Damage had ended on a note of optimism, with Captain Picard resuming the role he does best, exploring with the
Enterprise. That felt like a finale of sorts for TNG/Titan. I was a bit disgruntled that the DS9 series was not going to get any such send off and I had fully expected Voyager's
To Lose the Earth to be quietly cancelled.
But, thankfully,
To Lose the Earth did get it's much awaited release date, and Kirsten Beyer was even able to leave a few things for
Coda to use presumably. Thankfully Voyager's major lingering storylines have been resolved for the most part.
But I'm grateful we're getting
Coda. It's very rare in Star Trek tie-in history for any novels to be released that are overtly inconsistent with current canon. It's a credit to all the authors who have participated in the relaunches over the years that have made them at least popular enough that S&S saw some value in allowing a conclusion to proceed at all. Now, I think many of us are assuming that whatever happens will bring the litverse in line with Picard, however impossible that might seem. And, maybe, we can hold out some hope that some form of the existing litverse might continue once that's done.
I don't have any issues with standalone novels. It's nice to read a self contained story. But I've enjoyed the continuing storylines of the relaunches as well. It was nice to read stories that built off previous stories.
That does leave the question that this thread is about. What about the Enterprise relaunch novels? For the most part, that is the one series that is mostly unaffected by any current shows (not every detail, but for the most part I think it's compatible). I do think right now there will be no Enterprise novels. Will Christopher get to continue his Rise of the Federation novels? From his posts, it seems, at least for the immediate future....no. But who can know the future. Maybe at some point he, or some other author, will get to pick up where he left off. I imagine based on where we left things that he probably has some ideas of where he was hoping to take Enterprise next. Reading the Enterprise boards here, I have noticed just a bit of a new appreciation for Enterprise. Some fans who rejected it initially, perhaps because of franchise or even just plain Berman fatigue, that have given it a 2nd look. And you even see here some complaints about Discovery based on things we saw in Enterprise (which itself received some similar complaints that have now been either glossed over or accepted).
I think it all comes down to simple marketing. If we ever see future Enterprise books it will be because S&S sees something that might sell books.
Actually, come to think of it, now that Trek is chugging along again with multiple canon projects via streaming television, the Romulan War may stand an actual chance of receiving a full-fledged screen project.
I've given up all hope of ever seeing The Romulan War make it on screen. Enterprise was probably our best chance of that.
I always thought that was one of the major pivotal events in Star Trek future history that we know little about in canon (the other probably being World War III). The Romulan War led to the formation of the Federation, so it is one of the key events.
But the current shows seem focused on the 23rd century into the future. I haven't seen anything that shows me any real interest in returning to the 22nd century.
I know I was happy that the war finally saw at least a novel release. While it's not 'canon', for now it's all we have. I just wish they had kept it the initial 3 or 4 books it was originally supposed to be. I liked the build up and the first Romulan War novel. But I always thought the 2nd one got short changed. I don't even blame Michael Martin for the whirl wind pace of it. I imagine he probably had things planned out for a 3-4 books series and had to cut a lot out to fit that into one novel. Sadly the 2nd novel felt more like a summary of events. Which is one reason I've said many times over the years I wish we had a Tales of the Romulan War anthology to fill in those details, using the Romulan War novels as a framework. But the time for that is past I'm afraid.
Also Scotty thinking Kirk was still alive, which was contradicted when Generations came out.
Yeah, I think even the writers of Generations acknowledged the continuity error. I recall a novel did offer an explanation, I think it was
Engines of Destiny, that Scotty was a bit disoriented after being in stasis for so long, and he was actually a bit embarrassed by it.
It was an explanation that at least sounds plausible.
If anything, the franchise is far more consistent on the whole now than it was in the early years. Back then, the very fundamentals of the universe were in flux or undefined, and it could be inconsistent about very large things. These days, we have a much clearer, more detailed picture of how the universe works, and the inconsistencies are more about minor details.
Story wise I think that's probably true. It seems each successive show running team has tried a bit harder to work within the confines of the continuity already established. Berman-era Trek seemed the first time, at IMO, that an actual attempt was made to try to keep some sort of continuity. Now, they didn't always succeed, but it was there. They've continued to build on that as the years have gone on, tightening the story up more and more.
Certainly I think there is at least a more internal consistency within the shows themselves, probably because of the serialized nature of the shows. They've even taken it a step further and have tried to even incorporate the show tie-ins into their continuity where plausible.
My issues, particularly when it comes to Discovery, are more related to production design. Yes, the other PD

. That's the thing I get most hung up on. A giant window on the bridge (ugh, how does the bridge crew not have chronic nausea from that, esp. at warp

), spore drive (ok, maybe more of a story element in that case), Giger-Klingons, and other production design choices that make it hard for me to reconcile visually. Yes, yes, I know, I've complained about those things ad nauseum. But that's what gets under my skin.
In Picard's case it's a bit easier to explain away since it's in the future. The thing that bugs me about Picard is how inconsistent it is with the novelverse. I know the showrunners are not at all constrained in any way by tie-ins. But I can't help it. I've invested far, far more time in following the novelverse than I have in Picard, naturally because they have been going on really for over 20 years now and Picard has had one. But I can't help but see Picard as the alternate timeline.
Part of that is probably because I actually prefer the relaunch timeline over Picard. Another credit to all the authors over the years. I've come to care about the storylines and even the original characters created for the novels.