Komarr (Miles Vorkosigan Adventures) | Lois McMaster Bujold | This is one of the best books of the series!
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Komarr (Miles Vork...
Komarr (Miles Vorkosigan Adventures)
Lois McMaster Bujold
Baen
, 1999 - 384 pages
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based on 90 reviews
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highly recommended
The orbital solar mirror vital to the terraforming of planet
Komarr
has been shattered by a ship hurtling off course, and the Emperor of Barrayar has sent
Miles
Vorkosigan
to find out why. The choice of Miles is not a popular one on Komarr, where a betrayal a generation before drenched the name of Vorkosigan in blood. Amidst lies and treachery, Miles is caught in a race against time to stop a plot that could exile him from Barrayar forever. His hope lies in an unexpected ally, one with wounds as deep and honor as beleaguered as his own.
Miles from the outside - a treat!
This was better than any of the previous
Miles
novels, from a different point of view than that of the story. The little
Vorkosigan
from the eyes of strangers lights up some of the darkest details of his everyday life, and the plot concerning rather Ekaterin's life than Miles' is refreshing.
After abandoning the Naismith identity (not too soon, as revealed in "A civil campaign" by the Cetagandan message regarding the issue), Miles threw everything he had into his new "job" of Imperial Auditor. In this persona he comes to
Komarr
to learn from Lord Auditor Vorthys the secrets of the trade, in a case of mysterious management of the terraformation team. There he meets Ekaterin Vorsoisson, mother of a 9 yr old Nikki that has a genetic disease she's desperate to remedy, and wife of Tien, one of the (soon-to-be-revealed) consirators on the biggest threat to Barrayar's Wormhole to the rest of the universe... Eventually, when push comes to shove, the Vorsoisson family has the stage and Miles can do no more then observe and mop up after.
Ekaterin is beautifully portreyed, finally a full-fleshed-out female character!!, and her view of Miles in action is a great treat. Their incipient love story is enticing and convincing, and the Vorkosigan saga grows richly engrossed by this book!
I enjoyed it enormously! Highly recommended.
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This is one of the best books of the series!
Favorite books of the
Vorkosigan
series: Cordelia's Honor, Young
Miles
, and
Komarr
; Civil Campaign is a contender. I know, those are compilations, but that's what I read and how they sell them. Komarr probably appeals more to women than to men (unlike others of the series), but then again by now you're so hooked you just want Miles to darn well find a great woman who'll actually live on Barrayar with him! Ekaterin is actually a bit unexpected, she's so quiet and uncertain about herself, that you expect her to be unable to resist Miles' tornado-plus-hurricane way of life, but she's unusually deep and strong. There's a mystery here too for the new Imperial Auditor, but really it's the love story that's the important thing... a love story that continues into A Civil Campaign and Winterfair Gifts.
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Rich characterization. Evolving Characters.
Bujold is excellent at providing us with real characters with depth that change over time. This book entails
Miles
's first foray as a bona fide full time Imperial Auditor. As you might expect, his travels are not uneventful. Bujold is consistently top-notch.
A step forward in the Vorkosigan Saga
Lois McMaster bujold has always built her career around her willingness to do the unexpected. Every book up to this point contained big surprises: betrayals, secret identities, surprise attacks, spontaneous plot devices. After a time, you come to understand her method, and you learn to expect the unexpected. But it seems that she expects us to expect the unexpected, and keeps pulling out more stops that we didn't even know were there. So in "
Komarr
", we have
Miles
on his first mission as a permanent Imperial Auditor, investigating possible sabatoge on the Komarr terraforming project. You might expect a lot of things from this, but would you ever expect Bujold to turn the book into ... a romantic comedy?
Well, she does, and it's an astoundingly deep comedy at that. Ekaterin Vorsoisson is the unhappy wife of an important bureaucrat. Said bureaucrat has unpleasant jealousies, plus some unfortunate skeletons in his closet that will build up to a mini-climax halfway through the book. But the true surprise is the budding romance between Ekaterin and Miles, which is developed through the same deft twists and turns that Bujold usually employs for the military and political side of her plots.
"Komarr" really is an amazing book, one that delivers enough action to satisfy any fan while challenging us with questions of what makes a marriage work, or not work. A typical fan might accept the diversion into romantic territory or might not, but the book stands out for anyone with a heart and a brain.
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Not Free SF Reader
Suicide is a rather extreme method for getting someone into trouble.
Miles
tags along on an investigation that takes place on
Komarr
. There are some isolations to foil, and a woman to take a fancy too. She is married, but it turns out her ball and chain is more bent than a pig's genitals. Said bloke actually offs himself to try and put the heat on Miles. Not the sharpest tool in the hogcleaning shed, you could say
Throw in a secret weapons plot and it gets a little tricky.
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