TEA:
This was a dramatic attempt to completely re-direct the themes of the IP of EVE. It told a coherent enough story, and I give credit for that, but it did so being completely unaware of it's own setting. Sure, those who are hardcore loregeeks facepalmed like E.Honda as they trundled through the chapters, but the real misdirection of TEA was it's attempt to make Brand Icons out of faction leaders. This was accomplished mainly by packing the cluster with random and senseless 'conveniences', none of which actually made any of those Brand Icons relatable, respectable, enviable, or even villiafiable. Even Heth, the apparent Bastard in Chief of the story is little more than a passenger to the whims of ridiculous chance.
TBL:
This was a pure loredump. There are two storylines, one which must explore every single pirate faction in EVE, and another which must explore every empire faction in EVE. In each case, you get an amazing number of 'sitcom' contrivances; each phase of a story is simply setting up a situation where the characters can bail out and get to the next required location. Both stories end as though the book simply ran out of mandated locations to visit, and just dumped the characters on the sidewalk, with it's protagonists joining forces, manipulating the world, and blowing the minds of all the pirate faction leaders of New Eden with the scope of an Incredible Plan, only to piss it away at the last minute, leaving the reader with an incredible sense of "Wait, that's IT???"
Mind you, canon-wise, this thing is The Bible. I keep it on my desk for quick reference on all things EVE, and it's word on 'how things are' is damn near unquestionable. As such, I think it was actually quite worth my money, but I also realize I'm a very tiny portion of it's intended audience.
T1:
When I have enough money lying around that making mistakes for the fun of it becomes practical, maybe I'll pick this up. As it is, there doesn't seem to be anything in it's pages that I really need, and it's salient plot impacts are well understood through other avenues.