Ratings25
Average rating4.1
Full review:
http://fantasycafe.blogspot.com/2008/04/review-of-cordelias-honor.html
Cordelia's Honor contains the first two chronological novels in Lois McMaster Bujold's Miles Vorkosigan series, Shards of Honor and Barrayar. These books could also be viewed as prequels to the series since they are not actually about the life of Miles but instead tell the story of how his parents met and how Miles came to be disfigured before birth. Shards of Honor is Bujold's first published novel while Barrayar was released 5 years later after other books in the series had been written. The latter is a direct sequel to the former and completes the story begun in the first book, some parts of which Bujold had originally wanted to include in Shards of Honor before she realized it was too long. While the first half of the story was certainly enjoyable, it did lack polish and Bujold's extra writing experience shows in Barrayar, which is a much tighter novel and the winner of the 1992 Hugo Award.
I mentioned on twitter a little while ago that I'd never read any of the Vorkosigan books, and had a few friends admonish me over the fact. One of them was kind enough to include a link to a free ebook of this volume, so I was encouraged to give it a read.
I LOVED IT.
At first it seemed like it was going to be the typical “two radically different people are thrown together in an unlikely situation that causes them to fall in love” story. I usually hate that kind of story, with the two exceptions of The African Queen and Speed. Bujold manages to make it work, though - the romance between Cordelia and Aral feels realistic and a logical consequence of their personalities, rather than something just slapped onto the story.
Another thing that I really liked about this book was the attention given to the sociopolitical realities of the novel. A lot of the time that's something that's glossed over in SF, but here it forms a large part of the narrative. If anything I was reminded of Martin's Game of Thrones for that aspect (although admittedly it's less gory and convoluted as that book gets).
I'm really glad I checked this one out and I look forward to reading the rest of the series!
Cordelia's Honor was the April read for the Sword and Laser podcast. This sci-fi adventure follows our heroine from her time as a commander of a scientific vessel, a brief period as a soldier, and then her transition to life as a member of the aristocracy on a different planet. Along the way she falls in love, gets married and has a son.
I have to tell you, this book was a good reminder to not judge a book by its cover! The artwork lead me to not have super high hopes for this. (I was thinking it must have been published in the 80s...but the internet says 1996?? Which I guess is 30 years ago so that might have something to do with it.