enne📚 reviewed A Civil Campaign by Lois McMaster Bujold (Vorkosigan Saga (13))
A Civil Campaign
5 stars
Surely, the real point of having a dozen previous books in a long running series establishing characters and world building is so that you can then truly and properly roast them in the worst dinner party disaster ever imagined.
This book is a comedy of manners about various courtships in the shade of the Emperor getting married. I love that a science fiction action politics series can have a book like this in the middle of it, and it doesn't feel out of place.
I do wonder a little how well this book would stand up on its own, though. There's so much history with Drou and Kou, Cordelia, Mark, Alys Vorpatril, Simon that it's hard to know if this would be quite as satisfying to a reader who doesn't have the level of background of reading all the previous books. I think the primary crux of the story, of …
Surely, the real point of having a dozen previous books in a long running series establishing characters and world building is so that you can then truly and properly roast them in the worst dinner party disaster ever imagined.
This book is a comedy of manners about various courtships in the shade of the Emperor getting married. I love that a science fiction action politics series can have a book like this in the middle of it, and it doesn't feel out of place.
I do wonder a little how well this book would stand up on its own, though. There's so much history with Drou and Kou, Cordelia, Mark, Alys Vorpatril, Simon that it's hard to know if this would be quite as satisfying to a reader who doesn't have the level of background of reading all the previous books. I think the primary crux of the story, of Miles waging a surprise war of secretly courting Ekaterin as if it were a military endeavor (and, crucially, without telling her), is romantic comedy that could land for anybody.
There are just SO many delightful moments in this book: * "Mother, Father, let me introduce--she's getting away!" * the pile of terrible suitors for Ekaterin * Cordelia sitting Kareen's parents on the couch to be the baba between them and Mark and Kareen * Ivan being seconded to his mother for the imperial wedding * the Lord Dono reveal to Ivan (but just Dono in general) * Gregor giving Nikki his comconsole number, and Nikki calling * the final courtroom (re)proposal scene in the end
A brief plural aside about Mark and his headmates; I do observe that this book definitely posits Mark as the one who "should" be in charge, with everybody else as explicitly "subordinate" and are described as "semi-autonomous subpersonalities". To me this feels somewhat different than how the previous books have treated it.
(A further brief aside about the cover linked here, but Miles is not taller than Ekaterin. Maybe boxes are really popular?)