
A few more comments on SNW 10 stories:
"The Fate of Captain Ransom" by Rob Vagle
Missing-scene stories fascinate me. What's the backstory behind that line of dialogue? What happened after the camera cut away? What fleeting moment can be spun into an entire story all its own? I love reading them and writing them. Of the 15 stories I sent in to SNW, I think 11 were missing-scene pieces.

I was quite taken by the premise of "Captain Ransom," the idea of taking those few seconds as he's waiting for his ship to explode, climbing inside his head, and finding a story there. Rob did a good job of grounding me in the arena of the source episode from Voyager on which he based his story, so it didn't matter that I hadn't seen in in forever; I could follow along just fine. (Tricky question that I encountered myself. How much do I reveal, and how much do I hold back?)
Ransom is given a chance to avoid death--this penance he has willingly chosen--by aliens who have no conception of the right or wrong of the situation. But Ransom gradually realizes that his conscience won't let him escape responsibility, even if he wanted to. Watching him relive his past, the happy life he feels he no longer deserves, the ideals and morals that he thought he would never abandon, was heartbreaking for me, just as it was for him.
In the end, though, the story was uplifting. By refusing to escape into fantasy, Ransom achieved a greater measure of redemption and nobility for me than he had in the episode. There was no crew to save this time, no sacrifice to make...just the personal desire to do what was right. The ending touched me deeply. Beautifully written, as well.
"The Day the Borg Came," by M.C. DeMarco
I really enjoyed this one. For one thing, it followed the thread of the Borg storyline from the arctic of First Contact's time all the way to the Borg Queen's destruction in Voyager's time in a way that made sense to me. Yay! And as each section moved the story forward, told from a different person's POV (each character spot-on, which was great), I got more emotionally involved. Gradually it is revealed that the main narrator is Admiral Janeway, who has set out to change the past and create a new timeline that will save Voyager, and more.
By the end of the story, I was more emotionally in tune with Janeway and her quest than I had been watching the Voyager finale. The story helped me by getting me to feel Annika's fear, Picard's helplessness, Janeway's determination. Her resolve to die in order to create this new, better future was breathtaking, and well done.