I just...I don't...I'm, uh...well...yah, no...this was hot garbage.
As I may have stated in other reviews, it always pains me to dislike anything Trek, especially TNG, because I'm a diehard Trekkie and I will die on that "The Next Generation was the best Trek series ever" hill, but this...ugh...
The premise is that there is a world hidden away in a nebula on the fringes of Federation space which was colonized by Humans during the 21st century (how they got this far out at that time, we'll just not get into right now)...and these Humans were fanatical religious fundamentalists who believed that anything fictional was a disease which needed to be expunged from Humanity. However, they are devout followers of the Judeo-Christian Bible which is just chock full of talking animals, dragons, witches, mystical events, etc...but I guess those aren't "fictional." They consider Science Fiction to be the worst of the worst (irony, she says in a singsong voice), but live in a society in which they all wear helmets which use technology to block out sight and sound (or filter it heavily, rather) and have ubiquitous flying ball-drones that can read anyone's thoughts instantly, are armed with radiation guns, hover everywhere, and are capable of instant dissemination of information amongst each other making them nigh undefeatable. So, you know, totally grounded technology. They even have space ships armed with nuclear weapons and giant versions of their flying ball-drones to fight on battlefields...which is weird considering that they appear to be a world under the thumb of a united planetary government, so what battlefields? ...but, you know, not science fictiony at all.
Most amazingly, they appear to have been a group of colonists who were very diverse, numerous, and accepted those from all over Earth - even though they were fanatically fundamentalist - typically things which don't go hand in hand - as three hundred years later there are still those who are ethnically Australian Aborigine, African, and Native American amongst their population. Also, it seems that those who rebel against this all-controlling society, the Dissenters, have no personality of their own and completely become whichever fictional character they've managed to learn about and they also make sure that they stay within their own perceived native culture, I guess. The Native American Dissenter is Coyote, the Aborigine is a Dreamwalking Earth Mother, the Africans are mythical West African water spirits, a white guy is Odysseus, a Scottish girl is Rhianna, etc., etc. There aren't any Asian Don Quixotes or Hispanic Paul Bunyons or English Sun Tzus...
There are also a couple of Ambassadors onboard from the First Federation (you remember that creepy kid from The Original Series) and they are also creepy kids and we first meet them when Riker stumbles across them in a turbolift making out with each other...or as Riker perceives it "toddlers making out"...was this necessary?!? What the hell? You know, it is possible to describe Halflings getting all romantic without making it sound like toddlers...sheesh...anyway, apparently these Ambassadors are going around being "mischievous" or something...and they are ethnographers, so they say they're down with anything, just chilling on the Enterprise 'cause it's fun or something...
There's also this mysterious element because Deanna Troi keeps perceiving some kind of alien life which seems to make her collapse into a trance state as they talk to her and they all just so happen to resemble mythological creatures and/or gods from Earth's history...weirdly coincidental...and Troi believes that they are somehow in contact with the Dissenters on the planet - oh, it's called Rampart, by the way - and she spends a lot of the book investigating this mysterious connection....
*spoilers*
...which amounts to fuck all. Apparently, early in the novel, Deanna was hanging out with the Ambassadors from the First Federation - who presumably were not making out at the time - and they showed her a movie that they had made during their various visits to Earth in the past where they collected the stories and myths of various cultures and peoples across the planet...and this caused Deanna apparently to lose her fucking mind. It turns out that every time Deanna saw these "Other Worlders" as she called them, she was just tripping balls. There's even a whole scene where all of these mythical and fictional beasts she has encountered whilst tranced attack an installation on Rampart, with Gulliver himself busting out the ground - the illustration on the cover is the battle scene - and Troi believes that she is turning into a statue...
...and it turns out to just be a series of bad acid-trip hallucinations, with the battle taking place as she was just sitting there handcuffed along with a few other Enterprise crew in a holding area whilst this played in her head. I just...I don't get it...what was the point of this whole "Other Worlder" thing...it meant nothing, it went nowhere, and its removal of the story would change literally nothing...well, okay, Worf wouldn't be encouraged to write a novel...and since we all know Worf became a famous novelist...oh, wait...um...okay...
In the end, an apparent Human colony, who is hostile to the Federation, and has destroyed a Federation starship, will be left alone because of the "Prime Directive" or whatever...
Oh, and there's also another blind Engineer, a female this time, who is actually a Human who was cloned by genetic material some alien race stole from Earth at various points of time, but as they weren't the best with Human biology, they botched it and she's blind...and then somehow was rescued or escaped and went to the Academy, and now has finger sensors that help her see through a special headset that translates touch to vision, she's just like Geordi, the book stresses...and when Riker finally sees her without her helmet he can't help but notice how pretty she is...because Riker is so fricking cringey!!!
And wonder-boy Wesley designs a weapon which is capable of turning anything it hits into a ball of harmless neutrinos which then shoot off to everywhere doing nothing, as neutrinos do - which is how they defeat the floaty-balls...and we never hear about it again. Also, the author seems to be a follower of the pretty much debunked Big Crunch theory of the Universe, as they claim that neutrinos are the source of the dark matter mass mystery which will cause the Universe to collapse back in and itself again someday...which is a no and a no...but, maybe it was more popular in the late 80s...??
Also, Data's poetry is so bad that it renders AIs inoperable and thus defeatable...but, Data is an AI, so, um...and Picard was mind-wiped, but then his personality CD-ROM was immediately reuploaded into himself, and Riker's head was shaved...bet that's not mentioned again...
What was good? Um...not much...fundamentalist break away colonies have been handled in so many better ways - see Grayson and Masada in David Weber's Honor Harrington series for one...sheesh, um, nothing was...I literally can not think of anything...