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Komarr
 
 

Komarr (Hardcover)

by Lois McMaster Bujold (Author) "The last gleaming sliver of Komarr's true-sun melted out of sight beyond the low hills on the western horizon ..." (more)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

Lois McMaster Bujold comes through again with another sharp Miles Vorkosigan novel. Komarr can be read as a standalone, though it is part of a whole series. (Komarr brings the total to 16 books!) Miles is a hugely popular character with fans--and they won't be disappointed with his latest adventure.

The planet Komarr is undergoing centuries-long terraforming when one of the orbiting mirrors crucial to the effort is smashed by an off-course ship. Miles Vorkosigan is sent to Komarr to investigate the incident; once there, he becomes embroiled in political and scientific battles. To make matters worse, the name Vorkosigan is anathema on Komarr. But our intrepid hero can't be put down easily. While trying to save Komarr, he manages... maybe... to find true love at last! Bujold's original and intelligent blend of politics, science, and cliffhanging-good space opera makes this book a satisfying adventure and a charming romance. --Therese Littleton

From Publishers Weekly

Rendered unfit for military service by incurable seizures resulting from his having died, been cryofrozen and then revived, Miles Vorkosigan has managed to land on his feet once again, this time as an Imperial Auditor handling top-secret investigations of the most difficult and vital sort. When a gigantic solar-powered satellite necessary to the terraforming of the planet Komarr is damaged in a collision with an ore freighter, Miles and another Auditor are sent to determine whether the collision was an accident or sabotage. Conquered within living memory by the Barrayaran Empire, which Miles represents, Komarr has a history of rebellion. Worse, Miles's father, Lord Vorkosigan, who put down the last revolt, is hated by many Komarran patriots. Miles eventually uncovers what is apparently a straightforward scheme involving bribery in high places, but a darker and more dangerous plot is brewing below the surface, one that could destroy the Empire. In addition, he falls in love with the unhappily married wife of the government official who is his host. As usual, Bujold (Memory) tells a fast-moving story that combines just the right amount of action and wit as Miles continues to mature in a manner unusually complex for a series protagonist. Breaking new ground, Bujold tells much of her story from the viewpoint of Ekaterin Vorsoisson, the woman Miles falls in love with, and the portrait that emerges of a good woman stuck in a loveless marriage is both believable and intensely painful. Bujold continues to grow as a writer, and her work remains among the most enjoyable and rewarding in contemporary SF. (June) of the year and was a finalist for both the Hugo and the Nebula Awards.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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81 Reviews
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4.2 out of 5 stars (81 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The series remains fresh and readable., May 11 2000
By Peter Venetoklis (Brooklyn, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Komarr (Mass Market Paperback)
I keep waiting for this series to get stale, and every time I get a hint that it's starting downhill, I get pleasantly surprised. The book is a page-turner, incorporating the now-typical plot devices and twists, but throws in a set-up for Miles pursuing himself a wife in future installments. The new characters are a bit one-dimensional, and the female lead isn't developed enough for me to fully understand Miles' instant crush on her (though that may be as much a physical reaction on his part as anything else), but it is still a good read, and I'm looking forward to the next volume in the series.
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4.0 out of 5 stars More Space Soap Than Space Opera, Aug 14 2003
By David A. Lessnau (USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Komarr (Mass Market Paperback)
I enjoyed reading this book. But, I can see the writing on the wall. It looks like from now on Bujold is going to focus more on Mile's romance and personal activities instead of on an Action and Adventure type of plot. The Romance is well written, but I'd rather it took up 10% of the book instead of the 90% it did here. It looks like "Mirror Dance" was the last "true" Vorkosigan book, with "Memory" serving as the transition, and "Komarr" as the first of the new style. A shame, really. But, still good.
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4.0 out of 5 stars The good and the bad..., Oct 17 2002
This review is from: Komarr (Mass Market Paperback)
I started reading this series last month with Shards of Honor and Barrayar. What a beginning! If I have had any regrets about subsequent books, it is that Cordelia rarely appears in later books (until she is given a small but important role in A Civil Campaign, the last but one book published in this series).

Those who are new to the series should stop right here. Please, please, go back. At the very least, start with Mirror Dance. Better still, go back to Shards of Honor (the story of how Miles's parents met).

Nearly all the books in this series (beginning in terms of internal chronology with Falling Free) are about a brilliant young aristocrat turned mercenary admiral, Miles Vorkosigan/ Naismith. What is different about him, apart from his uncanny luck, is his physical disabilities. Miles Vorkosigan (the "Vor" is a nobiliary honorific on his home planet, Barrayar) was born badly crippled and stunted, thanks to a poison gas attack on his pregnant mother.

At the beginning of his career, Miles manages to pull triumph out of disaster, bluffing his way through major crises. [Read The Warrior's Apprentice and The Vor Game for details]. He later undergoes a life-changing experience after meeting his clone, who has been created by his father's enemies.

In KOMARR, Miles has shed his old career and his Naismith identity to become an Imperial Auditor (a high-ranking investigator of sorts). This book combines Miles-as-investigator with Miles-as-suitor. Except that the romantic interest Ekaterin Vorsoisson [nee Vorvayne] is already a wife, although she is married to an immensely selfish and irresponsible man Etienne (Tien) Vorsoisson. In the past, Miles has attempted to persuade at least two serious prospects to marry him and become Lady (and in the future, Countess) Vorkosigan. Both ladies have declined, wanting nothing to do with Barrayar. In KOMARR, Miles meets and falls in love with a real Vor lady, a lady of the middle to low aristocracy from his own planet. I am not sure what this means - is Miles actually deeply Vor inside (despite his youthful shenanigans), or is he reconciled to the fact that only a Vor lady would be happy on Barrayar? In short, is Miles attracted to Ekaterin because she is available (by the end of the book), or would he be attracted to her even if his old loves were willing and able to settle down to Vorish life with him?

I cannot answer that question, but I hope it will be addressed in later books. The story that unfolds in the meantime combines an investigation of an apparent accident, the political intrigues on Komarr (where Miles's family name is reviled for historic reasons), and a slow but growing love story. We also see a lot of the story from Ekaterin's point of view, as a Vor wife committed to her culture. Considering her upbringing and Barrayaran law (also followed for the Vor on Komarr), her choices or lack of choices are understandable. She is not a wimp, just a woman struggling with very limited choices. She begins to come into her own (very fortuitously!) at the end, showing us hints of what might have attracted Miles to her in the first place.

I have mixed feelings about this book. I don't object to the sad marriage between Ekaterin and Tien (Etienne, her first husband). Like others, while I appreciated the fact that much of this book was written from Ekaterin's point of view, I felt that the book created too much of a stock pseudo-villain in her husband (who we are meant to hate instantly). Adding a scene or two from his point of view might possibly have helped.

My problem, apart from Tien's one-sided portrayal, is that the pacing is rather slow in this book. The investigation and crime aspect seems underdone, and what the crime implies for Barrayar has been glossed over. Why must the whole episode be kept a secret? Without an understanding of Barrayaran politics and relations with Komarr (and even then), this veil of secrecy makes no sense.

The romance between Miles and Ekaterin itself, such as it is, is not badly done but I felt something lacking. Some of this might be inherent in the fact that Ekaterin is very much married for the first half of the book, and afterwards, it is impossible for several reasons for Miles to court her openly or secretly.

The Ekaterin of KOMARR is not yet the Ekaterin of A Civil Campaign (the next book). Here, in some ways, Ekaterin is more vulnerable and yet oddly likeable. She has been trapped here by the legal and social constraints upon her as a Barrayan wife and a Vor woman; in the next book, some of those constraints will continue to operate. In some ways, I liked the Ekaterin of Komarr far more than that of A Civil Campaign, perhaps because Miles himself (oddly muted in this book compared to his hyperactivity in the rest of the series) is far more vulnerable in this book. As such, he evokes a different response in her. It is certainly worth reading this book if only to read how other Barrayarans not well acquainted with the high Vor (aristocracy) view Miles Vorkosigan.

KOMARR was a pleasant read, but I really did not feel the pull, the compulsion to read and re-read, that I do with most of Bujold's books. A new reader to this series might be somewhat puzzled by some obscure references to Komarran-Barrayaran history, not to mention Miles's own personal history. I am not sure that this book stands alone very well. As such, I rate this book at 3.8 stars, although the series as a whole rates about 4.5 stars.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful storytelling!
It's impossible to choose a "favorite" Vorkosigan book, but a great many days, this qualifies. Superb plotting, believable characters who tug your heart. Read more
Published on Aug 5 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Read Me!
This isn't the first book. Have you read the first book? If not, you should immediately drop everything and order it. Now. Immediately. Right away. Read the whole series. Read more
Published on Aug 3 2002 by A. Trotter

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best Miles books
As Miles Vorkosigan novels go, this is one of my favorites... clean writing, tight plotting, amazingly taleneted and tragically flawed characters, and of course the introduction... Read more
Published on May 30 2002 by a superintelligent shade of th...

5.0 out of 5 stars Miles finds love! Well, maybe...
Komarr is another book in the series of adventures in the life of Miles Vorkosigan. In this one, he and another Imperial Auditor come to the planet Komarr (a planet in the... Read more
Published on April 18 2002 by David Roy

4.0 out of 5 stars A too-obvious "homage"?
I couldn't resist coming to see whether other readers noted the same thing that bugged me; but once here, I found I didn't have the patience to read 70-odd reviews. Read more
Published on Nov 22 2001 by Kathleen E. Kelly

4.0 out of 5 stars SF takes back seat to romance.
Komarr was my first exposure to Bujold's Miles Vorkosigan novels that have been popular for several years. Read more
Published on May 23 2001 by Bill Mac

5.0 out of 5 stars Enter Ekaterin
Miles Vorkosigan has been trying to get a Lady Vorkosigan of his own for a long time. But really, who would be strong enough to stand up to him? Read more
Published on April 6 2001

4.0 out of 5 stars Miles in Love
Once again, Bujold enfolds us in the continuing adventures of Miles Vorkosigan. This time he's off to a neighboring world, Komarr, to investigate the destruction of a solar... Read more
Published on April 1 2000 by E. A. McCombs

4.0 out of 5 stars Komarr--or how I lost a night's sleep!
This book starts off full tilt with a half-destroyed solar array, then picks up the pace! There are only three problems with Ms. Read more
Published on Jan 18 2000 by Ralph Smalley

4.0 out of 5 stars Murder, Mystery & Miles
This installment of the Vorkosigan Saga reminds me of Ethan of Athos. Since none of the characters from previos novels (except) Miles, appear in this book, I believe it makes a... Read more
Published on Dec 2 1999 by Randall Miyashiro

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