I am a big Science Fiction fan, and have read and watched a great deal of what is available. Science Fiction at its' best deals with the same major issues other great fiction does: Human suffering, loss, struggle, triumph, love, hate, revenge, prejudice, oppression, society, government, deception, honesty, and above all integrity, to name a few.
The primary literary device that separates Science Fiction from other Fiction is 'setting'. That is, the 'setting' is some semi-plausible future where scientific advancements have made some fundamental changes in familiar objects and (typically) meliorated some types of struggle and suffering. (For instance, hunger and illness may be removed).
This device in many cases allows the author to focus on specific flaws and strengths in characters without societal norms, prejudices and preoccupations of the period.
I love Science Fiction filled with Battle-stars, X-Wing fighters and FTL, but the plausibility of the science behind these stories is ALWAYS lacking. A "real dog-fight" in space would be VERY anticlimactic in comparison to anything on the big screen. But the true excitement of the "space battles" lies more in the audience's empathy with the characters and plot than the plausibility of the spacecraft .
In the end, any science fiction book or cinema that involves space travel is going to have to deal with "artificial gravity" because it is just awkward and darn inconvenient to write about or film people in constant free-fall. So, if you as a writer are going to "write-in" artificial gravity, then how you power your ship is a fairly trivial afterthought from a scientific plausibility point-of-view.
Why not reference the "discovery of the 'graviton'" and use gravity as your fuel? Your "graviton engine" allows you to align 'gravitons' into "a bi-polar orientation" so that the star you are leaving "pushes you away", and the star you are traveling to, "pulls you toward it", meanwhile, you can use control over 'gravitons' to be a plausible solution to gravity aboard your ship. It is neat, clean and concise (of course, scientifically absurd) and it will allow you plenty of ink to develop interesting characters in a well developed plot.
Fish