Ashley's Reviews > Shards of Honor

Shards of Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold
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really liked it
bookshelves: class-gender-race, espionage, sci-fi, space-opera, romantical, war, political-plots-and-maneuverings, audiobooks, half-starsies, manly-men-and-their-manparts, mental-health, murder-most-foul, survivalist, unfinished-series
Read 2 times. Last read August 15, 2023 to August 16, 2023.

Re-Read Review, August 2023: This is still three and a half stars, but I'm bumping it up this go-round. I'm very glad I re-read this, because I knew I had forgotten most of what happened here, except for the general arc of Cordelia and Aral Vorkosigan, but I didn't realize HOW much I'd forgotten. It was basically like reading it for the first time. I also did the audio, which was a little strange and clearly an older audio recording, but still enjoyable. I'll probably do the rest of the books by audio as well (unsure of order, probably chronological not publication order), so Barrayar is up next.

This book tells the story of how two people from very different cultures (in space!) find each other and fall in love, to eventually birth the main character of the series, Miles. This nicely sets up how the culture of Barrayar is viewed by other people in the galaxy, and specifically how Cordelia's upbringing and cultural ideals clash with Aral's, through the lens of a survival story slash spy thriller slash space battle type story. It's a lot for one little book, a problem I had the first time and still had this time.

I did also still find myself having to seek outside sources for clarification on plot points or things that seem to have been implied by the author a little too subtly. Not sure if this is just LMB's style in general, or if it's more influenced by the sff conventions of the time. This is certainly a much shorter book than would probably be published today.

Excited to finally see what the rest of this series has to offer!

Original Review, November 2015: What a strange little book, but I quite enjoyed it. Will definitely be reading the rest of the series.

I wavered on my rating for quite a while. I liked this more than some books I’ve read that I rated four stars, but it had some pretty significant pacing and world-building issues that were really jarring, and I just couldn’t ignore them. I’m also hoping that future books will be even better, so I’m saving my higher ratings, I guess.

I’ve been meaning to read this series for YEARS now. Until Ann Leckie came along and I gobbled up her delicious series (that just concluded last month), I hadn’t actually ever read any space opera written by a woman. One of my very favorite genres! This was unforgivable. And both of them bring such a wonderful perspective to it, I’m kicking myself for not reading this sooner. The Vorkosigan saga is almost as old as I am. I could have been reading it all along! Reading about space politics, galactic warfare, espionage, cloning, medical ethics, brainwashing, all that fun sci-fi shit, all filtered through a feminine viewpoint. It’s just so wonderful and refreshing. More ladies need to be writing in this genre if this kind of awesome crap* is what comes of it.

*If you haven’t read Ancillary Justice and its two sequels yet, and you are a fan of the Vorkosigan books, go rectify that immediately.

So apparently the main character of this series is another character called Miles, and this book is the story of how his parents met. It’s a love story, yes, but it’s also a story about keeping honor during wartime. The lovers from opposite sides is one of my very favorite tropes, and it’s done very well here, particularly for the way it illuminates the two cultures as Aral Vorkosigan (the supposed Butcher of Komarr) and Captain Cordelia Naismith (a scientist from a more progressive, less brutal culture) come to actually know one another.

I think a lot of my basic issues with the book could probably be boiled down to two things: this was the author’s first published novel, and it was published in the 1980s. Nowadays, a book with this plot would be probably twice as long, and have a more streamlined structure. This book just ZOOMS through plot. It’s only 300 pages long, and it covers enough time and events to fill probably an entire series. The world-building is extremely economical. So much of the world they live in was not in the book itself, and a lot of it was confusing, because Bujold just assumes you’ll catch up or something. It makes more sense now because I Wikipedia’d a bunch of stuff (whoops, spoilers), but it’s clear that the real stars are her characters, and the world came second, at least here.

The structure is also a bit wonky. The book is split roughly in two, the first half being Cordelia and Vorkosigan meeting on a neutral planet, and having to survive. He takes her prisoner, and she encounters Barrayaran culture for the first time, after she is taken aboard his ship. Then a war starts, and Bujold just skips that entirely. The second half takes place as the war comes to a close, and their relationship comes to fruition. It was jarring, and not telegraphed very well. It worked, but it felt very weird.

Anyway, I’m definitely excited to read the rest of the books in this series. I’ll finally be clued in to what a ton of other people have already known for almost thirty years! Ehhh, it’s never too late. Sometimes sci-fi doesn’t age well, but this book definitely has.

[3.5 stars]
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Reading Progress

December 5, 2012 – Shelved
November 7, 2015 –
7.0% "Wow, I suddenly retroactively dislike These Broken Stars more. Turns out this book did the whole 'stranded on a planet with an enemy of the opposite sex who you're probably going to fall in love with' thing first. Like, twenty-seven years before. And it looks like also better."
November 8, 2015 –
15.0% "Feeling no particular urge to read this, but when I do pick it up, I enjoy it."
November 9, 2015 –
30.0% "“And this was your friend?" Cordelia raised her eyebrows. "Seems to me the only difference between your friends and your enemies is how long they stand around chatting before they shoot you.”"
November 9, 2015 –
48.0% "This book doesn't mess around. I'm only on page 150 and it's already burned through enough plot to fill three books."
November 10, 2015 –
69.0% ""The real unforgivable acts are committed by calm men in beautiful green silk rooms, who deal death wholesale, by the shipload, without lust, without anger, or desire, or any redeeming emotion to excuse them but cold fear of some pretended future.

But the crimes they hope to prevent in that future are imaginary. The ones they commit in the present - they are real."
"
Started Reading
November 11, 2015 –
84.0% "This is effed up."
November 11, 2015 – Shelved as: class-gender-race
November 11, 2015 – Shelved as: espionage
November 11, 2015 – Shelved as: sci-fi
November 11, 2015 – Shelved as: space-opera
November 11, 2015 – Shelved as: romantical
November 11, 2015 – Shelved as: war
November 11, 2015 – Finished Reading
February 1, 2020 – Shelved as: political-plots-and-maneuverings
August 15, 2023 – Started Reading
August 15, 2023 – Shelved as: audiobooks
August 15, 2023 –
1.0% "Re-reading because I waited too long before reading the next book and I no longer remember anything."
August 15, 2023 –
26.0% "Only a character written in 1986 would greet the presence of “genuine vegetable oil spread” with this much enthusiasm."
August 16, 2023 –
69.0% "Whoa I’m getting through this weirdly fast. Also why is the GR app up but not the site. What’s happening."
August 16, 2023 – Shelved as: half-starsies
August 16, 2023 – Shelved as: manly-men-and-their-manparts
August 16, 2023 – Shelved as: mental-health
August 16, 2023 – Shelved as: murder-most-foul
August 16, 2023 – Shelved as: survivalist
August 16, 2023 – Shelved as: unfinished-series
August 16, 2023 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-1 of 1 (1 new)

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William You must try C.J. Cherryh's Alliance-Union universe. Terrific stuff. I especially loved the small book, Merchanter's Luck.


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