QUOTE (Cardul @ Sep 1 2009, 07:12 AM)

I agree with this..but, at the same time, I am really confused on the novels during WizKids...they seemed to have
issues, in that they did not really feature AR, or really much of of the real feel of SR(at least, the first 3, the second, non-linked 3 were actually pretty darned good..). The initial three, actually, seemed alot more like "D&d Modern, with some tech! Woo!" and the characters were rather weak.
It is kind of sad, actually, that traits to explain stuff in the WK novels got put in(Latent Awakening,Family Name, etc),
but places like The Hospice got left out. Heck, it was these novels that were teh first time I had ever heard of Cross Applied Technologies, a AAA Corp that came into being, then went away pretty much at the change from 3rd edition to 4th edition. In fact, it felt like there were plans for it in the WK novels, but nothing ever came of them.
It really makes me wish WK had not canceled the novels when they canceled their game, because, it was nice getting theoretically canon fiction again....At least, from now on, all the sourceboosk are going to have good sized pieces of fiction. SR4A and Seattle 2072 are great for the sheer amounts of fiction in them, great for helping new players get a feel for the universe, and so, obviously, this is meant as a change in how they are doing things to make up for the lack of Holostreets.
Well, the Wixzkids novels were done solely by Wizkids, while SR4 was being worked on about the same time by FanPro. Because of the lead time novels tend to have, the first bunch were written well before SR4 was being developed,m so the decision was to set them during SR3 instead and keep them there, at least for a while.
Also, the books were actually written for the SR Duels game. The Kellen Colt trilogy specifically was written to be a primer and introduction to the world of Shadowrun, so it starts off pretty simple, and pretty street level, though it escalates through the series. I know most of the characters featured in the books were all based on Duels figures, and there was a bit of baggage and stuff that came with the characters and the plotting. They were tie-in novels, and suffered from the same stuff all tie-in novels suffer.
ANyways, CGL has plans to publish their own novels in the near future, with Jason Hardy and Mel Odom on board, to name a couple. I'm especially excited about Mel Odom, as his Skater novels were among some of the best Shadowrun books at protraying a team that felt like they could have been PCs.