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Shards of Honour
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January 2019 - Shards of Honour
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Yoly
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rated it 3 stars
Jan 06, 2019 11:42AM

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I also have to admit, I'd never heard of this series or even the author before. I looked at the poll the other day and since it looked like this one was in the lead, I went out and picked it up, so I've actually started already. A few first impressions:
1. Man, there's a great big, bugger-all bunch of these! Looks like 15 "regular" books in the series with some sort of special edition Book #5.1-5.3 thingie, Borders of Infinity in there for good measure. I'm not sure what that decimaled version is about/for. Apparently, it's three novella length pieces that tie into the series one way or t'other. There appear to be more than one of those 'tweeners in this series, so I'm not sure how they've been counted up.
2. Shards of Honor is, apparently, book #1 in publication order, but the "third" book chronologically. I put "third" in quotes there because it's third after Dreamweaver's Dilemma, which is book #9.1 in publication order, but called book #0.5 chronologically, and calling Book #0.5 the first "book" when it's enumerated with a decimal seems like an odd way to count. Book #4 in publication order, Falling Free, is book #1 chronologically... meaning it's second.
I know that seems confusing, but I don't really think it should bug anyone overmuch. It's not like publishers didn't release editions of C.S. Lewis' Narnia books in chronological order in recent years, for instance, and I don't think it should trouble any sci-fi fan worth the price of a theater ticket to watch Star Wars, Episode 1....
The chronological and publication order are both listed under the series in her GR bio page, so either sequence is pretty easily pulled up.
Personally, I generally prefer to read books in publication order. A writer's craft sometimes shifts and develops over time, so the voice and skill with which an individual book is put together can make for a jarring shift when the books are retroactively reshuffled into the linear chronology.
Aside from the inconsistency in writing/style there's sometimes a plot spoiler issue. Probably the worst example of that would be the Star Wars ep5 line: "*I* am your father." That doesn't have nearly the same impact if you suffer through those movies in chronological order. If you watch ep1-3 before 4-6 then the same line will forever be echoed by the dulcet tones of Jar Jar Binks' voice announcing, "And meesa yousa Uncle Binksie, Lukesa Wooksa!"
Certainly in your average series, that doesn't usually happen with the same childhood destroying potential of George Lucas capitalizing on his marketing product then selling off the franchise to Disney. It depends on the series to a certain extent, of course. Reading the Dead Sea Scrolls in publication order, for instance, would probably put the Book of Revelations around the middle, and that would be weird. Thank God for Saint Jerome, we might say....
3. This is a Romance novel. It's a sci-fi romance novel, mind you, and I have to say right up front that from the first 1/4 or so that I've got into it, the bona fides of the book as a sci-fi book are pretty well established and track so far as pretty credible. That is, I remember reading Naked in Death by J.D. Robb/Nora Roberts/Eleanor Marie Robertson and finding the sci-fi credibility of that nominally sci-fi police procedural romance novel to be more than a little shaky. I'm sure at some point in her illustrious career Mz. Robb/erts/on must have read a share of sci-fi books, but from my reading of that book she didn't have a great handle on the concepts of the genre. Or computers. Or police procedures. Or guns. Or laser guns. That one read to me like a SF book that aged badly from the moment it was written, if not even before it was written....
This one tracks so far as much more legitimately sci-fi. Interstellar travel is explained by wormholes, they have sci-fi weapons, there are little tidbits of technology scattered throughout that more or less jibe and seem consistent. Such things in sci-fi can be wildly unlikely or simply impossible, but as long as they are internally consistent within the alternate reality that is a sci-fi product (Or any product, really. The Great Gatsby is an alternate reality novel.) then the writer has satisfied his/er obligations to the genre.
In this case, certain events and plot points might be improbable or unmotivated or poorly executed, but that's not an author stumbling over the genre itself, a much more fundamental issue.
![laurel [the suspected bibliophile] (laurelthereader)](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1645808644p1/7494844.jpg)
I also have to admit, I'd never heard o..."
The Vorkosigan series is my favorite series of all time.
Shards of Honor is a weaker addition mostly because I think it was one of the first novels she ever wrote, but it pairs very nicely with Barrayar (one of my favorites).

Then I saw it was kind of a big deal after seeing that this book had 20k+ ratings and that Tor.com has a re-reading The Vorkosigan Saga feature on their site
https://www.tor.com/series/rereading-...
I added it to my list at the time, so I'm excited to be reading this with the group.
I think she should hire someone to update her website, or "home page" like it says on the site. It looks like something straight out from 1995 internet
http://www.dendarii.com/



(view spoiler)

I’m not including many spoilers in my comments, but I’ll be talking about the book as a whole.
The insta-love bothered me as well. I don’t mind the romance but I think it happened too soon. The way the author shows us they’re “falling in love” was a bit cringey for me, but this book was published in 1986, so maybe it wasn’t as cheesy back then.
Something else I had trouble with was with the passage of time.
(view spoiler)
I enjoyed the story overall and wouldn’t mind reading at least the next one in the series. I really liked Aral as a character, even a bit more than Cordelia.

Now that you mention Klingons, I read this book started out as Star Trek fanfiction!
Bujold started this piece as Star Trek fanfiction. The Barryarans were Klingon—some of Aral’s dialogue in this section of the book has a distinctly Klingon terseness. Beta Colony represents the Federation; The Betan Survey crew clearly meant to go where no man had gone before, but accidentally stumbled onto a place where the Barryarans have definitely been before. It’s like the neutral zone. Although she is commanding an exploratory mission, Cordelia is not an analog for Kirk. Neither she nor anyone on her crew is a military strategist. Their ship is designed to run away from a fight, not to win it. Aral’s commentary on the Betan Survey crew’s limitations as soldiers is scathing and somewhat insensitive, under the circumstances.
https://www.tor.com/2016/04/25/reread...

Ah, I guess that adds up then. Earlier portions of the book track a lot more like a Federation/Klingon sort of thing, and they seemed less and less like those ST standards later in the book. Plus, each is a kind of one or two planet/system instead of a whole chunk of the galaxy. The Federation of Planet (not Planets) and the Klingon Emporium, we might say. The closer we get to either version in her novel, however, the further they get from anything Trek. I bet they get even more different and distinct in later installments.


Star Trek and Star Wars are pretty big fish in that contemporary pond, but I don't think they are particularly genre-creating or entirely original references. That is, an awful lot of either of those two products are derivative of a range of SF/F of their respective periods, and the creators appear to have been quite well versed in those ideas. One could argue with and use an awful lot of evidence/support from Lucas and various film buffs that Star Wars is a fanfic of Kurosawa, for instance. Star Trek was apparently pitched as "Wagon Train in space..." and Kirk based in no small way on Horatio Hornblower.
Which points out that genre is, itself, something of an arbitrary way to view stories, and can be pretty inaccurate. "Science Fiction" is an oxymoronic term when defined by the most common definitions of those words. That's the case for a lot of things, of course. Comic books aren't often comic, and they aren't books. Graphic novels are not necessarily graphic nor are they novels. Even "novel" as a term means "new" because that's what the form was considered when the term was coined... but I don't think it was really new in a particularly meaningful sense when it came into vogue, and certainly isn't now.
Personally, I see a lot of the basis of modern storytelling in Gilgamesh and would call that the earliest known SF/F product, so we're all reading/writing Sumerian Mythology fanfic.... I've also said that all one really needs to know about art can be found on the walls of caves painted 40,000 years ago. And I'm not kidding about that. Yes, there's vast cultural and historical bodies of work that have accumulated in the over millennia since, but the fundamentals and concepts of art ranging from abstraction to zoetropic storytelling are right there daubed on living stone by people who probably didn't get the respect they deserved from their contemporaries either....
So, I guess where ever one wants to place the sign posts.


OK, I had to post this...in honor of your reference to Gilgamesh, Gary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6JrOk...

I watched that when you posted it recently. I like that guy. He's flippantly pithy & weirdly erudite at the same time.

I can see that.
The author has said that she pictured Aral as looking like English film actor Oliver Reed, scar and all. Come to think of it, he could have made a very interesting Rochester.
Books mentioned in this topic
Borders of Infinity (other topics)Dreamweaver's Dilemma (other topics)
Falling Free (other topics)