Series: Book 10 in the Saga Vorkosigan series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-SciFi, Lang:en
Summary
Honor and his sense of self place the fetally damaged,
dwarf-like and brilliant Miles Vorkosigan in grave danger as
he attempts to save his disturbed, younger clone Mark from
the consequences of folly in this intricate and rousing new
installment of the Vorkosigan adventures (after Barrayar ),
the series' first appearance in trade hardcover. Passing
himself off as Admiral Miles Naismith, Miles's secret
identity, Mark commandeers one of the Dendarii Free Mercenary
vessels to liberate clones being raised as brain-transplant
hosts on the outlaw planet Jackson's Whole. When the plan
goes awry, Miles is killed. He is preserved for
resuscitation, however, in a cryo-chamber, which disappears
in the confusion of evacuation. As the Dendarii search
feverishly for their leader, the terrified Mark is sent to
Barrayar to Miles's parents, Count Aral and Countess Cordelia
Vorkosigan. The couple welcome him as a son and begin his
training as their heir in case Miles is never found. The
competitive and confused Mark, who had been created as a tool
to assassinate his father and was brutalized by a madman in
his youth, begins to find himself. His (and Miles's)
penetrating intelligence flowers, and he plans a return to
Jackson's Whole to find Miles and redeem himself. Hugo
award-winner Bujold creates a tapestry of variegated human
societies dispersed throughout a colorful galaxy. She peoples
it with introspective but genuine heroes who seize the
reader's imagination and intellect.
Bujold, winner of five major sf awards, may well garner a
sixth with this, her first hardcover original. It features
the deformed and undersized heir to the strongman of
Barrayar, Miles Vorkosigan, who doubles as Admiral Naismith,
leader of the Dendarii Mercenaries--and is secretly on the
payroll of Barrayaran Imperial Intelligence. The tale begins
with Miles' cloned sibling Mark masquerading as Miles in
order to take a Dendarii ship to that free enterprise plague
spot, Jackson's Whole, on an unauthorized mission to clean
out the clone creches where he was raised. The mission goes
awry, Miles comes to Mark's rescue, the rescue goes even more
wrong, and by page 100, Miles' body, in cryogenic suspension
after receiving mortal wounds, has been shoved into the
equivalent of a Federal Express drop and completely lost! The
remaining pages complete as good a story as ever was offered
as science fiction, with Bujold's carefully crafted prose,
logical working out of even minor plot points, and inimitable
wit all very much in evidence. Deserves the highest
recommendation and a hoard of eager readers.
Roland Green
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.From