Someone on Dreamwidth -- I don't remember who -- mentioned and recommended this Star Trek branded novel: Una McCormack's Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: The Never-Ending Sacrifice. I just finished it.
If you loved DS9 then you should strongly consider reading this. Especially if you found the Cardassian-Bajoran dynamic one of the best multi-world arcs of all of Trek.
This book:
Reading this also helped me appreciate how the Cardassian empire is probably the villain polity in Trek that makes the most sense to me. It acts like an empire -- it captures and extracts resources from subject worlds because it has stripped its own resources bare. It doesn't just go out and make war because of some inborn biological urge or because warriors have high status.
TANGENT ABOUT A PROBABLY HALF-CENTURY-OLD TREK NITPICK: The one big snag in this whole thing, of course, is replicators. Why is anyone going hungry or thirsty on Cardassia Prime, ever, if replicators exist?! Why does anyone have to farm??!! As far as I am aware this has never been adequately explained in canon (although there are a lot of episodes of the original series, Voyager, and The Animated Series that I have not watched). You can kind of handwave it by talking about the bootstrapping problem of manufacturing replicators, or saying that some things are not replicable with replicators, or by saying that replicators are actually really tetchy and high-maintenance and break a lot in hard conditions, or by coming up with some math about producing and distributing the joules of energy needed to power replicators and saying that's an infrastructure problem that's hard and slow to address.
[This is of course also related to the question Leonard asked on his blog decades ago and that I partially answered in one of the first emails I ever sent him (back before we'd even met, much less dated and married) -- what's the deal with the Ferengi being so scarcity-y in a universe where gold-pressed latinum and all the other stuff can be replicated? (A branded novel says: if you try to replicated gold-pressed latinum you just end up with regular latinum.) At least Mariner points this out in a recent Lower Decks episode!]
I usually don't get wrought up about this but the thirst and hunger and agronomy in the McCormack book really brings it to the forefront of my mind. We do get some hints that replicators are harder for an untrained person to fix than, say, power generators.
END OF TANGENT
Thinking about realistic and unrealistic Trek empires also made me realize that the Romulan-Vulcan split along logical vs. passionate lines reads to me as something out of fantasy, not scifi.
If you read and enjoyed this or another McCormack book please say so in the comments!
If you loved DS9 then you should strongly consider reading this. Especially if you found the Cardassian-Bajoran dynamic one of the best multi-world arcs of all of Trek.
This book:
- is like if Alan Furst wrote a book about people caught up in the shocks and tumult of the Cardassian empire over the course of DS9, and after
- is the most wrenching Star Trek branded book I've ever read (ok, maybe I've only read 20 or 30 or so)
- touches on Cardassian education, agriculture, visual arts, family life, funeral rituals, and more (as well as literature, as alluded to by the title)
- captures Dukat's voice so well that I felt like I could hear Marc Alaimo declaiming as he walked into the room
- for like 96% of its length is told from the point of view of people who are not Starfleet -- mostly Cardassians, but also a non-Starfleet starship captain
- builds on the worldbuilding in Andrew J. Robinson's Garak-POV novel A Stitch In Time
Reading this also helped me appreciate how the Cardassian empire is probably the villain polity in Trek that makes the most sense to me. It acts like an empire -- it captures and extracts resources from subject worlds because it has stripped its own resources bare. It doesn't just go out and make war because of some inborn biological urge or because warriors have high status.
TANGENT ABOUT A PROBABLY HALF-CENTURY-OLD TREK NITPICK: The one big snag in this whole thing, of course, is replicators. Why is anyone going hungry or thirsty on Cardassia Prime, ever, if replicators exist?! Why does anyone have to farm??!! As far as I am aware this has never been adequately explained in canon (although there are a lot of episodes of the original series, Voyager, and The Animated Series that I have not watched). You can kind of handwave it by talking about the bootstrapping problem of manufacturing replicators, or saying that some things are not replicable with replicators, or by saying that replicators are actually really tetchy and high-maintenance and break a lot in hard conditions, or by coming up with some math about producing and distributing the joules of energy needed to power replicators and saying that's an infrastructure problem that's hard and slow to address.
[This is of course also related to the question Leonard asked on his blog decades ago and that I partially answered in one of the first emails I ever sent him (back before we'd even met, much less dated and married) -- what's the deal with the Ferengi being so scarcity-y in a universe where gold-pressed latinum and all the other stuff can be replicated? (A branded novel says: if you try to replicated gold-pressed latinum you just end up with regular latinum.) At least Mariner points this out in a recent Lower Decks episode!]
I usually don't get wrought up about this but the thirst and hunger and agronomy in the McCormack book really brings it to the forefront of my mind. We do get some hints that replicators are harder for an untrained person to fix than, say, power generators.
END OF TANGENT
Thinking about realistic and unrealistic Trek empires also made me realize that the Romulan-Vulcan split along logical vs. passionate lines reads to me as something out of fantasy, not scifi.
If you read and enjoyed this or another McCormack book please say so in the comments!