Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen

, #18

Kindle Edition, 352 pages

Published Feb. 3, 2016 by Baen.

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (10 reviews)

Three years after her famous husband's death, Cordelia Vorkosigan, widowed Vicereine of Sergyar, spins her life in a new direction. Caught up in her plans in ways they'd never imagined, Oliver Jole, Admiral, Sergyar Fleet, is confronted with an unexpected career crossroads, and Miles Vorkosigan, one of Emperor Gregor's key investigators, dispatches himself on an inquiry he never anticipated -- into the mystery of his own mother.

Plans, wills, and expectations collide in this thoughtful science fiction social comedy, as the impact of galactic technology changes all the old rules, and Oliver and Cordelia must work together to reconcile the past, the present, and the future.

1 edition

Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen

3 stars

On paper, this final book in the Vorkosigan saga is doing some really neat things. It creates such a pleasing parallel bookend to the opening book, Shards of Honor. Both are set on Sergyar with Cordelia as a point of view character, Aral features heavily in both (although as a palpable absence here), and both thematically are about choosing new directions for your life. It's a nice way to send a series off into the sunset.

This book also has an incredible plot hook, to my mind. We learn that Aral, Cordelia, and Jole have been discreetly in a relationship together for twenty years off page. Or, probably better put, Cordelia and Jole have both been orbiting around the gravity well of Aral and both been in a relationship with him. This isn't that surprising as the reader was already aware that Aral was bi, and Cordelia is Betan …

Dissappointingly small stakes

2 stars

I liked the character of Cornelia Naismith in the earlier two Vorkossigan novels, and was glad to see Bujold return to focus on the character in this book. Sadly for me, it was my least-favorite book of the series by a wide margain. The stakes begin on a personal level, as they have in the other books, but they never expand. No spies, no intrigue, no battles. And in the end, not much happens. Bujold loves these characters, clearly, to the expense of a compelling narrative. It's not a bad time, it's just a real let-down.

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