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picklish@books.theunseen.city

Joined 2 years, 1 month ago

I read largely sff, some romance and mystery, very little non-fiction. I'm trying to write at least a little review of everything I'm reading, but it's a little bit of an experiment in progress.

I'm @picklish@weirder.earth elsewhere.

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reviewed The Dark Forest by Cixin Liu (Remembrance of Earth's Past #2)

Cixin Liu: The Dark Forest (Hardcover, 2015) 4 stars

"With the scope of Dune and the rousing action of Independence Day, this near-future trilogy …

Evokes golden age Sci-Fi in some good & a few problematic ways

3 stars

I read this novel by accident. I looked it up after hearing about the dark forest hypothesis and I somehow missed the fact that this is the second book in a trilogy. I read the Three-Body Problem few years ago but didn't particularly like it. I found the same faults repeated in this novel too.

This book reads like a story from the science fiction's golden age: it has an interesting sci-fi concept at it's core, and it logically extrapolates from there. Cixin Liu does a really good job at this; at times it feels like Asimov's Foundation. Unlike the previous book, this one takes the plot into the farther future, and Liu gets to flex his creative muscle. The depiction of future cities and spaceships is well thought out and realistic. As a whole this book felt like reading through a game of chess.

Which leads me to the …

Lois McMaster Bujold: Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen (2016, Baen) 4 stars

Three years after her famous husband's death, Cordelia Vorkosigan, widowed Vicereine of Sergyar, spins her …

I’m not sure there is any such thing as recovery; there’s only forgetting. One just has to... keep forgetting till one slowly gets better at it.”

Her echo of his thought briefly unnerved him. He said, “It’s as if people have to die twice, that.”

Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen by  (Vorkosigan Saga, #18) (27%)

Lois McMaster Bujold: Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen (2016, Baen) 4 stars

Three years after her famous husband's death, Cordelia Vorkosigan, widowed Vicereine of Sergyar, spins her …

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 …

Lois McMaster Bujold: Cryoburn (2010, Baen Books) 4 stars

Like a great tree the old general had been, but a tree did not only give shelter from the storm. How would Barrayar be different if that towering figure had not fallen, permitting sunlight to penetrate to the forest floor and new growth to flourish? What if the only way to effect change on Barrayar had been to violently destroy what had gone before, instead of waiting for the cycle of generations to gracefully remove it?

Cryoburn by  (17%)

Lois McMaster Bujold: Cryoburn (2010, Baen Books) 4 stars

Cryoburn

3 stars

This is the final Miles-centric book for the series. One of the best parts of this book is that we get so much of Armsman Roic's wry point of view of the shenanigans.

To me, this one is weakened by trying to hearken back to the mode of adventure investigation Miles. Diplomatic Immunity works for me because it's sandwiched between two romantic comedies, involves Ekaterin, ties together a number of elements, and crucially ends with a "we really can't keep doing this anymore" moment for Bel and Miles. So, it's a little weird that he does, in fact, keep doing this. This book is set on a new Japan-esque planet that we have not heard of previously and involves mostly new characters; it largely feels like a one-off than a series capstone.

I think there are a lot of good components to this book that don't all gel together. The …

Lois McMaster Bujold: Captain Vorpatril's Alliance (Hardcover, 2012, Baen Books, Distributed by Simon & Schuster) 4 stars

"Book Fourteen in the best-selling Vorkosigan series. Captain Ivan Vorpatril is happy with his relatively …

"I wonder if he really thinks he married me?"

Rish shifted her head and eyed Tej narrowly, as if checking to see that her pupils were still the same size. "Do you think you really married him?"

"I have no idea. I guess the important thing is that everyone else seems to." Tej took a deep breath. "And till we find out what all else this Lady Vorpatril business is good for, we'd likely better go along with it."

Captain Vorpatril's Alliance by  (Vorkosigan saga) (24%)

Lois McMaster Bujold: Captain Vorpatril's Alliance (Hardcover, 2012, Baen Books, Distributed by Simon & Schuster) 4 stars

"Book Fourteen in the best-selling Vorkosigan series. Captain Ivan Vorpatril is happy with his relatively …

Captain Vorpatril's Alliance

4 stars

"I, Ivan Xav Vorpatril, ..., do take thee, uh ... what did you say your name was, again?"

If I had to rank books in this series by their comedy, this book would be up there right behind A Civil Campaign. Ivan Vorpatril has always had a long series of girlfriends but has dodged marriage as much as he's dodged extra work. The plot hook here is that in an attempt to save two women who are on the run from bounty hunters, immigration, and the local police, Ivan comes up with the idea to marry one of them in a rush (temporarily, of course!). Comedy ensues.

I love that there's a lot of ambiguity about how everybody else reacts to this "temporary" marriage. You get the feeling that everyone is sort of raising their eyebrow at Ivan, but also taking it seriously and are waiting for Ivan to come …

reviewed Diplomatic immunity by Lois McMaster Bujold (Vorkosigan Saga)

Lois McMaster Bujold: Diplomatic immunity (Paperback, 2003, Earthlight) 4 stars

Diplomatic Immunity

4 stars

Miles and Ekaterin are getting back from their honeymoon when they are sent off to quaddiespace to investigate some Barrayarans who have gotten into some trouble. Needless to say this small investigation immediately escalates into attempted murders and politics (always) and threats of all out war. This book manages to tie in a bunch of bits from other books: there's the quaddies from Falling Free, Nicol from Labyrinth, Bel Thorne from a bunch of previous books, but also the Star Creche from Cetaganda. I think there's enough background explanation here (sometimes too much) that you could read this book without having read any of the others.

One thing I do really love about this book is that we get to see how terrible Barrayarans are. We get this perspective a little bit from Cordelia's point of view in Shards of Honor when Betans are horrified by backwards militaristic Barrayarans. And …

replied to VKNask's status

@VKNask yeah, it's funny to me how different some rereads feel; between me changing over time and also misremembering details, sometimes I come back to something again and am really surprised by what I notice.

I've never read these books! Is this one you've reread a bunch?

Lois McMaster Bujold: Falling Free (Paperback, 1988, Baen Books) 4 stars

From the back cover: Leo Graf was just your average highly efficient engineer: mind your …

"Now, when a machine becomes obsolete, we scrap it. When a man's training becomes obsolete, we send him back to school. But your obsolescence was bred in your bones. It's either a cruel mistake, or, or, or," he paused for emphasis, "the greatest opportunity you will ever have to become a free people."

"Don't... don't take notes," Leo choked, as heads bent automatically over their scribble boards, illuminating his key words with their light pens as the auto-transcription marched across their displays. "This isn't a class. This is real life." He had to stop a moment to regain his equilibrium. He was positive some child at the back was still highlighting "no notes--real life", in reflexive virtue.

Falling Free by  (49%)

Lois McMaster Bujold: Falling Free (Paperback, 1988, Baen Books) 4 stars

From the back cover: Leo Graf was just your average highly efficient engineer: mind your …

Falling Free

4 stars

I think the foreword pitches this book better than I can.

We all know what happens when technological obsolescence hits the products of engineering; what would happen if (always a key SFnal question) technological obsolescence hit the products of bioengineering.

This is a book set two hundred years before Miles Vorkosigan is born. It sets up the origin story of the "quaddies", a genetically engineered race of four-armed people meant to live in zero gravity environments. It's a fun story of corporate greed, "kids" being smarter than their parents give them credit for, and a hectic escape to freedom. Unlike most of the other books in this series, this one feels the most like a more classic science fiction story.

(For those playing Bujold bingo at home, this also fits the older man younger woman romance trope between Leo and Silver. It's very funny that the book Diplomatic Immunity has …