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Cordelia's Honor
 
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Cordelia's Honor [Mass Market Paperback]

Lois McMaster Bujold
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (45 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 9.50 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Book Description

When enemies become mare that friends they win. In her first trial by fire, Cordelia Naismith captained a throwaway ship of the Betan Expeditionary Force on a mission to destroy an enemy armada. Discovering deception within deception, treachery within treachery, she was forced into a separate peace with her chief opponent, Lord Aral Vorkosigan he who was called 'The Butcher of Komarr' and would consequently become an outcast on her own planet and the Lady Vorkosigan on his. Sick of combat and betrayal, she was ready to settle down to a quiet life, interrupted only by the occasion ceremonial appearances required of the Lady Vorkosigan. But when the Emperor died, Aral became guardian of the infant heir to the imperial throne of Barrayar and the target of high-tech assassins in a dynastic civil war that was reminiscent of Earth's Middle Ages, but fought with up-to-the minute biowar technology. Neither Aral nor Cordelia guessed the part that their cell-damaged unborn would play in Barrayar's bloody legacy. Publisher's Note: Cordelia's Honor is comprised of two parts: Shards of Honor and Barrayar. Together they form a continuous story following the life of Cordelia Vorkosigan nee Naismith from the day she met her then-enemy Lord Aral Vorkosigan through the boyhood of her son Miles. Barrayar won the Hugo Award for best science fiction novel of the year.

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Customer Reviews

45 Reviews
5 star:
 (32)
4 star:
 (9)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (4)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (45 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Good Introduction to the Vor Series, April 29 2004
By 
swiven (Meaux, LA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cordelia's Honor (Mass Market Paperback)
This was my introduction to the Vor series, and I really enjoyed it as such. It's definitely light reading, but provided good entertainment while it lasted.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Cordelia's Honor, Feb 22 2004
By 
not4prophet (North Carolina) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cordelia's Honor (Mass Market Paperback)
Space opera is what we have here. And as far as it goes, Lois McMaster Bujold does it pretty well. There's plenty of action, characters to cheer for, and some nice twists and turns throughout. Our heroine is Cordelia Naismith, a scientist from the stiflingly modern Beta Colony, who gets caught up in a complex web of strategy and betrayal during a war with a comparably primitive planet and repeatedly finds herself thrown together with Commander Vorkosigan.

I find little to say about these two novels. For sure, Bujold coordinates her plot well, with clever surprises arriving on a regular basis and all of it building up to a comprehensive and rather grim picture of the societies involved. Character development is relatively strong, as we get good portraits of emotional intensity from both the main characters throughout the book. I think that most of the dialogue exchanges are handled well, with occasional dashes of humor. The villains, on the other hand, are so underdeveloped that they might as well have twirling black mustaches. Fine entertainment overall, much recommended, but not perfect.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Not just a prequel; an awesome story in an on itself, Jan 31 2004
By 
Daniel Roy "triseult" (Shanghai, China) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cordelia's Honor (Mass Market Paperback)
Before I picked up the two novels comprising this book (Shards of Honor and Barrayar), I somehow managed to completely miss the Lois Bujold phenomenon known as the Miles Vorkosigan series. Something about some love affair between a captain and a naive astrocartographer just didn't seem like my idea of good SF, whatever the rave reviews... Boy, was I ever wrong.

Don't take these two novels as just a prequel to the Miles Vorkosigan stories. Frankly, they're totally awesome in their own right. Cordelia is a fantastic protagonist, working both as a naive narrator, amazed at the workings of a militaristic empire as much as the readers, but she also comes from a fascinating society in her own right, which is far removed from our world, it seems, as Barrayar is.

Cordelia, truth be told, is a breath of fresh air in today's SF. Yes, we've seen heroines before, but most of the times, they are clumsily written by men who seem to only grasp their way of thinking on the surface. Cordelia is a living, breathing woman, feminine in outlook yet incredibly brave and strong by men's standards, and she somehow manages to keep her own self intact in the face of a dramatically patriarcal and militaristic society.

That's what Cordelia's Honor is, at the heart: the story of a woman's survival in a patriarcal society, and the way she inevitably changes it, and changes herself. By the end of the second novel, I was stunned at the significance of Miles' birth... How he is, for better or for worse, the product of this clash of cultures, and how scarred he has been by the clash even before he was born. Cordelia's first words to him are so terribly poignant in that regard.

As I move on to read the story of Miles himself, I mourn the disappearance of a cherished SF character. I already miss Cordelia's -voice-, her mesmerizing insight into the society of men she was transplanted in. My hat is off to Mrs. Bujold, for one of SF's most human yet memorable characters.

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