Reviews

Brothers in Arms, by Lois McMaster Bujold

lisalark's review against another edition

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4.0

Liked this though not as much as the earlier stuff. More fragmented, darker, and while the writing wasn't scattered the characters are. Quinn also felt sort of . . . cardboard. Actually every woman Miles has dated as felt cardboard, from his point of view. Makes them more than a little boring and leaves me puzzled as to what he sees in them, although objectively based on their descriptions I suspect they are awesome characters.

Miles needs to nail himself down, a little, I think.

geofisch's review against another edition

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4.0

Not my favorite, but sets up a lot for the next few books.

kimu's review against another edition

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5.0

Perhaps my favorite Vorkosigan book so far...

Reread: November 2018

2022 reread: still really liked this one, but will note that the descriptions about Bel Thorne seem really outdated at this point.

manuphoto's review against another edition

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4.0

A very good read, like the whole series. Well paced with characters I know and love. The action is good, the humour too. There is some deeper stuff in it, character-wise, which I appreciate. But it doesn’t distract, it just adds a layer. It’s very well balanced.

snazel's review against another edition

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4.0

Miles is so young! And so is Duv! And Mark! And Bel! My babies.

pickett22's review against another edition

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4.0

One of the things I love about this series is watching Miles grow. Like he used to give Elena such a hard time about being a woman who wanted honour and glory, and now that asshole at the embassy tells him to "get all these women out of here" and he just wants to pull the guy's throat out.
And he doesn't blame Elli for not wanting Barrayar. He's sad about it, but he also realizes that everything he loves about her is everything Barrayar would smother. It's fantastic.

Also, I just want to pet Mark forever. Poor wee lamb.

I am not even remotely ready for Mirror Dance.

tpietila's review against another edition

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4.0

I decided to read the ”Mirror Dance” by Lois McMaster Bujold. I read a few pages and found that I was pretty much lost as the book seemed to continue a story started in an earlier book. I found out by a short Google search that this was the previous book. When I started this book, I found that I was pretty much lost, as the story first seemed to continue straight from an earlier book. I got over that part soon and found myself really enjoying the story didn't go back to the still previous installment.

Miles Vorgosigan returns as his alter ego, Admiral Naismith, from a secret mission to Cetagandan space. His mission was a great success, and the Cetagandans are _really_ pissed at him. He is ordered to the Barrayaran embassy of Earth in London as himself. Never before the both identities have been so close together, and he is afraid that someone makes the connection between two different characters and learns that the same person is behind both. To explain why there are two deformed, but extremely bright dwarf who look exactly the same he makes up a lie: Admiral Naismith is an illegal clone made from Miles Vorgosigan, who has escaped an unknown party, who created the clone as an attempt to undermine Barrayaran government. However, it turns out that there really IS a clone, which was created for exactly that purpose. And the plan to dispose of the real Miles and replace him is going on.

A very good book, much better than the Cryoburn, which was nominated for Hugo award a couple of years ago. The book was entertaining and full of smooth action, amusing dialogue and entertaining situations. I often like books with cocky heroes and Miles is pretty much the definition of cocky. In a good way. This book makes me look forward to reading the “Mirror Dance” which according to some reviews might be the best one of the series.
352 pp.

mauxbs's review against another edition

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3.0

At this point, I'm on board with the Vorkosigan Saga. I'm not sure why. They're very military adventure, which isn't really my jam. I guess they're a known quantity. I think I tend to pick one up after I've read something disappointing.

klettie's review against another edition

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4.0

4/5… but really 3.5/5. I’m rounding up.

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I’ll always round up for you, LMB! I said before about Cetaganda: not all Vorkosigan books can be so compelling. Maybe I was trying to read this one too quickly, or maybe it just wasn’t as fresh for me as some of the others felt. It doesn’t feel totally fair just to talk about how this one didn’t *quite* stack up to the others, though, so I’ll start with the good (there is a lot of it):

1) Future Earth is a functionally solarpunk vision, and I love it. Solarpunk is a scifi subculture dedicated to hopeful futures, building visions that we can work toward. Lois McMaster Bujold’s vision of Earth is such a Utopia. Where the rest of the –galaxy? universe? unclear — is racked with conflict and colonization, Earth is in a peaceful backwater that is disconnected from the rest of the universe. Without hitting us over the head with it, LMB shows us that Earth now is quiet and thoughtful and civilized. More than anything it is quaintly historic.

Spoiler
2) Mark, the clone, and the discussions of clone ethics were excellent — I could have used more. LMB rarely if ever hits us over the head with any kind of social message, and she doesn’t here either, but I kind of wish she had explored the clone question in more depth. As always, she puts some of her most progressive, provocative thoughts into Cordelia’s and Betan society’s norms: that Mark, as a clone, is naturally Miles’s brother by law, that there is nothing wrong with cloning. Instead, what is wrong is the subsequent takeover of the body by a rich old person, per what happens in Jackson’s Whole. We saw a little of this world, and I’m hungry for more here. Mark in general was an excellent character — the idea that he was created to be Miles means that his inherent relationship with Miles is fraught.


3) FINALLY, we get more about Komarr! I know we have known of Komarr’s strategic importance for a while, and we’ve known Aral to be the “Butcher of Komarr.” In this book we finally learn about what actually happened, and why it continues to be challenging from a astro-political view. I would have enjoyed automatically understanding why it was significant that Galeni was from Komarr without having it explained to me, but I’m glad to have learned about it at all.

4) Speaking of which… FINALLY we get a competent superior to Miles! Galeni is an exceptional human being, and I deeply appreciated the growing respect between Miles and Galeni. Miles has been plagued with superiors who don’t understand his particular brand of genius, who are Barrayaran career soldiers who follow orders and protocol to a T, and I’m tired of it. I was so excited for this theme to be broken, and for Miles to connect with someone in his own force with a level of competence that he had.

5) The Dendarii Fleet’s money troubles were so real. I keep thinking of more good things about this book, and this was yet another one. The financial pressure on the
Dendarii fleet was always lurking.
SpoilerSure, they never mutinied on him — but they could have, and would have, and
I appreciated the use of capitalism in this space opera context to ground the story in something that feels hyper realistic to us non-space travelers.

6) Elli Quinn, Elena Bothari, what lovely lady isn’t Miles going to fall for? I’m a little tired of every book having a new woman for Miles to fall in love with. I could say: at least they don’t all fall in love with him? But it doesn’t help.
SpoilerI thought the part where he proposed to Elli Quinn was bonkers, but I liked the way she let him down.
The women are real characters in these books — but Miles doesn’t always treat them like real characters. He’s still pretty young when it comes to these relationships.

7) Miles mostly felt safe throughout this story, and his disabilities felt more like veneer than they did in other books. In the first book, Warrior’s Apprentice, the fear of Miles’s bones breaking was ever present, only mitigated by the presence of Bothari. When Bothari died, Miles no longer felt safe — I feared for him. That carried through The Vor Game, but got lost in Cetaganda and Brothers in Arms. Miles feels undefeatable now. LMB needs to make us feel like Miles is really at risk. I hope to see more of that in future books.

I can’t speed through these, they are too good, and yet I find myself consuming them like cheese and crackers, soup on a cold day, lemonade in summer. I will be so sad when they are over.

paula_s's review against another edition

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5.0

Me gusta entrar en los libros de la Saga Vorkosigan sin saber nada o lo menos posible, aunque en realidad no ha habido libro en que Miles y su tropa no me haya sorprendido varias veces: Nunca, absolutamente nunca, sabes por dónde te va a salir el bueno de Miles. Solo sabes que en cuanto huela el más mínimo problema, se meterá en él de cabeza.

Y menudos problemas los que escoge el hombrecillo, cada uno más complejo que el anterior, siempre. Todo empieza con una pequeña tontería de nada, que cualquier persona hubiera solucionado rápidamente o hubiera ignorado por completo, pero no Miles Vorkosigan. Consigue que todo acabe siendo una especie de juego de muñecas rusas, esas que se meten una dentro de otra, de más grande a más pequeña, pero en el sentido contrario, de menos a más.

Llegado a este punto no se puede revelar mucho más, creedme, es divertidisimo, estrambótico, irreverente y tiene un genio para el mal que utiliza para… no se, algo. Lo que si quiero señalar que en el libro tercero, cuando conocimos a Miles (los dos primeros libros corresponden a Cordelia y Aral Vorkosigan) nos parecía un niñato insoportable con una flor en el… en fin, y a medida que transcurren los libros se va dando una cuenta de que te gusta más y más como personaje. Porque es tan poco ortodoxo en sus métodos, tiene tales salidas de tono y tales ideas que no sabes si tiene límite, pero quieres estar ahí con él para comprobarlo.