Paperback

English language

Published June 1, 1986 by Baen Books.

ISBN:
978-0-671-65574-7
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4 stars (35 reviews)

9 editions

reviewed Shards of Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold (Vorkosigan Saga (1))

Shards of Honor

4 stars

I decided for December I'm going to just do a bunch of comfort rereading, and my brain has been clamoring for "what if you just reread all of Bujold's Vorkosigan series again (again)". I could reread just A Civil Campaign like most people do, but maybe it's time to reread them all.

Shards of Honor is the "first" book in this series, and genre-wise feels like a space opera romance. (Arguably Falling Free comes first chronologically if you're being pedantic.) If you haven't read these books, most of the series stars Miles Vorkosigan, and this book is the setup of how his parents Aral and Cordelia met and its sequel deals with the circumstances around Miles' birth.

This book does need some content warnings especially for rape, sexual assault, alcoholism, and ableism. This book was first published in 1986, and I think the book cover listed on unseen.city is doing …

reviewed Shards of Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold (Vorkosigan Saga (1))

Review of 'Shards of Honor' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

Pros:
Middle-aged competent female protagonist. Moral and philosophical ambiguity. The great start to what I'm sure will be an above-average 20+ book space politics saga.

Cons:
I truly do not need any more rape or near-rape in my reading life, and this is a little (lol) dated.

The scenes that most struck me were those when Cordelia had returned home and was met with that slick, neo-liberal, 'we know what's good for you,' non-consensual medical care. I think it'd resonate with anyone who's come up against a dominant power structure and felt confined by their presumptions.

Review of 'Shards of Honor' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

2022 reread:

I've been fascinated by the Vorkosigan series for a long time, I think because it has all the elements of things I feel I should like, but I find all the books but this one irritating to the point of unreadability. Miles is not really someone I can stand in prose, and the female characters all feel toothless from his limited perspective. To a certain extent, I've heard this is subverted later in the series, this review isn't about those books. It's about this one.

When I first read Shards of Honor, after reading several Miles-focus books, I found it light and sharp in its perfection, at least in comparison to books I really disliked. It felt like this book questioned the premises I found so grating later in the series - the whole-sale veneration of monarchism and militarism, the refrains of 'necessary evil' and 'just …

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Subjects

  • Science Fiction - General
  • Fiction / Science Fiction / General
  • Fiction
  • Fiction - Science Fiction