Star Trek: The Next Generation Relaunch

Part of the Star Trek Novel Verse, continuing the adventures of most of the original TNG characters and the Enterprise post-Star Trek: Nemesis. There are nine books at present:


 * Death In Winter (parts of which take place before the events of Nemesis)
 * Resistance (kicks off the "Borg War" storyline that continues through the next three novels and sets the stage for the Crisis Crossover Star Trek: Destiny)
 * Q&A
 * The Skys The Limit (short story collection)
 * Before Dishonor
 * Greater Than The Sum
 * (The Star Trek: Destiny trilogy slots in here)
 * Losing The Peace
 * Paths of Disharmony, the Next Generation entry in the Star Trek: Typhon Pact series.
 * Indistinguishable From Magic

See also, Star Trek: A Time to..., which is the series preceding this in the chronological adventures of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew.

""Did you try to contact her after the Odyssey went boom? Did you try to find her any time during the entire Dominion War? No, this is about you. You had a near-death experience when the Borg hit Vulcan, and by some miracle, you lived. You managed to get rescued, fixed up, and flown to a hospital on the other side of the planet, where you got a lot of time to just lie there and think about how close you came to being just more sand piled on the Forge. Now you've got this big second chance, so now you want to reach out to all those you've hurt and make amends for all your wrongs"."
 * Aborted Arc: The end of Resistance seemed to be setting up T'Lana as a romantic interest for Worf, then Before Dishonour happens. He's with Jasminder Choudhury now, instead.
 * Arc Welding: Q & A retcons every appearance of Q into a decades-long Xanatos Roulette to prepare humanity for the Secret Test of Character being conducted by Them. Except for the Sherwood Forest thing. That one was just for the hell of it. Or possibly for the Foe Yay.
 * Arch Enemy: The Borg Queen with Janeway, Picard, and Seven of Nine.
 * Ascended to A Higher Plane of Existence:.
 * The Atoner: Picard, for the destruction he wrought as Locutus. While he has come to terms with it since First Contact, it understandably still drives him.
 * Worf, for how his actions (saving Jadzia's life instead of the Cardassian spy Lasaran's) helped drag out the Dominion War when the information Lasaran had could probably have stopped it. As a result, he feels he doesn't deserve to be in a position of such authority as second-in-command of the Enterprise when Picard offers him the post.
 * Geordi in his attempts to protect Seven of Nine, due to his failure to save the female Borg Reannon (which is a Continuity Nod to the TNG novel Vendetta).
 * Awesome but Impractical: It's pointed out in Greater Than the Sum that Borg Cubes are essentially this, hinting that there's more to the Collective than a simple desire for efficiency after all.
 * Blue and Orange Morality: The race known only as Them, who threaten to destroy the Universe because it's boring. And they're only stopped when Picard laughs at the absurdity of it.
 * Breather Episode: Q&A. And considering that it's about the end of the freaking Universe, that's really saying something about the other books, no?
 * Call Back: Pretty much every Borg-related plot thread in the Canon gets referenced, and many become key plot points.
 * Calling the Old Man Out: T’Ryssa in Losing the Peace, after her father finally makes contact, looking for information on her mother (specifically, if she survived the Borg invasion):


 * The Cameo: A string of them feature in Q&A, as various characters in the Star Trek Expanded Universe respond to the reality-warping taking place. Among them are Klag from Star Trek: Klingon Empire, Shelby and Mueller from Star Trek: New Frontier, Riker and his crew from Star Trek: Titan, and Donatra.
 * Another New Frontier captain (actually The Captain of that franchise), Mac Calhoun, appears in Before Dishonor.
 * Cloudcuckoolander: Lt. Stevens in Before Dishonor, though it turns out
 * Cool Old Guy: Montgomery Scott qualifies as of Indistinguishable from Magic. He's a grandfather to his men in the Corps of Engineers, the Romulans know him simply as "The Miracle Worker", and the Klingon Empire is happy to loan him their top starship pilot because he asked nicely.
 * The Ditz: T'Ryssa, or so it seems at first.
 * Eldritch Abomination: The entity that created the Noh Angels is the rare benevolent version.
 * Elves vs. Dwarves: Worf vs. T'Lana.
 * Evil Matriarch: The Borg Queen, natch. (And in Before Dishonor, the Borg Queen is !)
 * Fantastic Racism: T'Lana has a bit of this towards everybody who isn't Vulcan, and Worf in particular.
 * A Father to His Men: Picard, as always. But now in particular to T'Ryssa, who acutely reminds him of one of his "children" from his experience as Kamin.
 * Fictional Currency: The Ilec is a Karemma currency, evidently an alternative to the canonical Dirak.
 * Foreshadowing: The Borg Queen's threat to  that the Borg are analyzing her during their conversation, and that with time they will eventually be able to assimilate and learn the skills of   This comes into play later in the climactic battle of Before Dishonor, see Ass Pull and Hope Spot.
 * T'Ryssa questions why a race as obsessed with efficiency as the Borg would design their ships in a perfect cube rather than a more energy efficient sphere, hinting that there's something more to the Borg than the protagonists know about.
 * Genki Girl: T'Ryssa Chen. She is fully aware of it and is doing it intentionally to be different from the Vulcans.
 * Half-Human Hybrid: T'Ryssa Chen, half Vulcan.
 * Happiness in Slavery:  experiences this briefly upon being assimilated, and the Borg Queen later tries to convince Seven of Nine that she will find this in the Collective. In fact, Geordi notes that Seven's willingness to meld with   as its pilot may be as a result of her subconsciously being more comfortable as part of the collective than as an individual being.
 * Happily Married: Jean-Luc Picard and Beverly Crusher, who spend much more time on speaking terms than the other major couple from the Next Generation.
 * Heroic BSOD: Picard has one pretty much from Resistance, all the way to the end of Star Trek: Destiny.
 * Heroic Sacrifice:  in Resistance, narrowly avoided by Seven of Nine in Before Dishonor (but not by ).
 * Hive Mind: The Borg, of course...especially the new Borg that give Starfleet an intense new war after they've "evolved" into consuming rather than assimilating. And yes, Pluto was one of the new Borg's first snacks.
 * Hope Spot: Just when  is finally going to serve the Borg their ass on a silver platter once and for all, the Borg Queen teleports the Cube behind it (using the time/space warping skills she apparently gleaned from the Borg's analysis of  ) and begins to absorb it, too.
 * Hurl It Into the Sun: Starfleet Command briefly thinks that  has somehow overcome the Borg Queen, recaptured control of her body and is attempting this with the Borg Cube when it veers off course toward the sun. They were wrong.
 * Jerkass: T'Lana, Lt. Leybenzon, Lady Q (though not quite as much as her husband).
 * Killed Off for Real: Most infamously, though it's hinted that she may be able to return one day when, after   tells her she can't go back, she mentions how Spock got better after the Genesis incident. More recently,   has also been killed, or so it seems. They Never Found the Body, so he might have made it...
 * Klingons Love Shakespeare: Thur chim Gliv, in Losing the Peace, a Tellarite who enjoys classic human comedy.
 * Lampshade Hanging: In Indistinguishable From Magic, a character asks what the "NCC" in starship registries stands for. The character being asked - who is a starship captain, mind you - says he has no idea. This is pretty much the author acknowledging the fact that the frequently asked question has never been officially answered.
 * Martial Pacifist: Jasminder Choudhury, the security officer in the second half of the series. Also her chosen deputy, Rennan Konya (who first appeared as a member of the Starfleet Corps of Engineers).
 * My God, What Have I Done?: Lt. Kadohata says this almost verbatim in Before Dishonor after seizing control of the Enterprise from Picard (on Starfleet orders, however).
 * Naked on Arrival: T'Ryssa. Then she asks if her old boyfriend lives nearby; Middle-Eastern appearance, name of Adam....
 * Never Found the Body:  in Indistinguishable From Magic. He's probably dead, but for all we know he managed to transport somewhere safe in the nick of time. The other characters are all convinced he's gone, but we'll have to wait and see if he ever shows up again...
 * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero:  death scene during the Battle of Barolia, where he allows the Borg to assimilate Starfleet’s only major defence.
 * No-Holds-Barred Beatdown: The Borg to the Starfleet armada in Before Dishonor. It "made Wolf 359 look like a minor skirmish".
 * Noodle Incident: In homage to the original Noodle Incident, T'Ryssa Chen has the Tubegrub Incident.
 * Obstructive Bureaucrat: The Governors of Alpha Centauri and Pacifica in Losing the Peace, who at first don't grasp how desperate conditions are in the refugee camps, and spend most of their time causing further unrest and complicating the resettlement efforts.
 * Our Elves Are Better: T'Ryssa, who used to play in the forest pretending to be an elf. Less a case of this, though, and more a case of Your Elves Suck.
 * Pardon My Klingon: The Tellarite curse word "krught" crops up again, having been established in Star Trek: The Lost Era.
 * Pluto Is Expendable: Played devastatingly straight (although technically it's not destroyed, just absorbed; its matter is redistributed into the Borg Cube).
 * The Pollyanna: True to their pleasant, hospitality-based culture, the Risians are desperately trying to remain optimistic. Risa itself was destroyed in Star Trek: Destiny, a casualty of the Borg Invasion. The refugees are attempting to retain the expected "sunny Risian" outlook. Whether it will work out for them remains to be seen. One of the biggest problems is that Risa's natives pride themselves on declaring "all that is ours is yours". Now the Risians have nothing, and instead of hospitably receiving guests they are dependent on others for aid.
 * Pungeon Master: One of T'Ryssa's favorite pastimes.
 * Resistance Is Futile: Well, it's The Borg, what'd you expect?
 * The Runaway: T'Ryssa ran away from home at age 7, after learning of the Vulcan kahs-wan survival rite that usually takes place at that time. She signed onto a freighter as ship's cook (the captain didn't particularly care that she was a young child) before being retrieved.
 * Sapient Ship: It turns out that Borg Cubes are (to a degree) sentient, and that the Borg and their new Queen have become a part of the giant one thought deactivated at the end of Resistance. Basically, the cube is a part of the collective too - in a sense, the Borg are the cube, not the drones.
 * Secret Test of Character: In Q and A, the beings known only as Them (quite possibly later known as the D'myurj from the Star Trek: New Frontier novel Treason) perform these on the inhabitants of entire universes.
 * Shame If Something Happened: Sela pulls this on a Kevratan rebel, in Death in Winter.
 * Sheep in Wolf's Clothing: In Resistance, Picard attempts to infiltrate a Borg ship by partially reassimilating into the Collective as Locutus.
 * Shout-Out: The author of Greater Than The Sum mentions in the acknowledgements that the "Noh Angels" were directly inspired by the creations of Hayao Miyazaki and Chiaki Konaka (most likely No-Face from Spirited Away).
 * Single Biome Planet: Kevratas is an ice world.
 * Smug Snake: Eborion in Death in Winter. He overestimated his ability to play the Romulan nobility off of each other, and was betrayed by his own aunt. So much for his ambitions to be proconsul – Tomalak gets that position instead.
 * Starfish Aliens: The Noh Angel cluster entity in Greater Than the Sum.
 * Straw Vulcan: T'Lana. There's a damn good reason Picard wants her the hell off the Enterprise at the end of Before Dishonour. Even Spock completely washes his hands of her after she fails to hear reason. She does acknowledge her own faults in Greater Than the Sum, and herself admits she was completely out of line, as well as unprofessional in the extreme..
 * Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Amusingly averted with the character of Thur chim Gliv, in Losing the Peace. Word of God has pretty much confirmed that the jovial Tellarite engineer Gliv is as deliberately different from established Tellarite engineer Mor glasch Tev (of Starfleet Corps of Engineers) as possible.
 * The Stoic: T'Lana, and then completely subverted after she departs, with T'Ryssa Chen.
 * Think of the Children: The Governor of Pacifica in Losing the Peace. He was concerned about refugees' effects on the Selkie breeding islands, but might possibly have been simply annoyed by the refugees. He insisted that the delicate environmental requirements of the Selkie young risked being disrupted by the settlers, and that in the name of the children steps should be taken to remove the outsiders.
 * They Do: Picard and Crusher, finally.
 * Title Drop: In Losing the Peace, when a character states her current fears about the rebuilding efforts in the aftermath of Star Trek: Destiny. She worries that the Federation might have won the war, only to risk losing the peace to their own complacency.
 * Too Dumb to Live: T'Lana,
 * Trickster Mentor: Q, of course. He's been training Captain Picard over the course of most of their previous encounters, preparing him for an appearance before Them, the creators of the universe. Picard will represent all of creation before Them, and Q needs to ensure he makes a good show of it.
 * Underwater City: The Pacifica capital city of hi'Leyi'a, first mentioned in Star Trek: Titan, is visited in Losing the Peace.
 * Weapon of Mass Destruction: The Doomsday Machine from the Original Series;, though admittedly, this was already theorized in Vendetta years ago, complete with an appearance by
 * What the Hell, Hero?: Geordi to Picard during Star Trek: Destiny, in response to Picard's order to construct a Thalaron weapon with which to wipe out the Borg en-masse. Geordi outright refuses to do it, whatever the consequences to his career. In fact, a fair bit of the Enterprise plot in Star Trek: Destiny involves Beverly calling this on Picard, too. Ezri finally gives him what for, as well.
 * You Cannot Grasp the True Form: Them, the creators of the universe (as well as several other realities), and the keepers of the meaning of life. Given that they exist outside the universe, it's not surprising they aren't described- no human could likely comprehend them.