Series: Book 11 in the Saga Vorkosigan series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-SciFi, Lang:en
Summary
Miles turns 30, and--though he isn't slowing down just
yet--he is starting to lose interest in the game of Wall: the
one where he tries to climb the wall, fails, gets up, and
tries again. Having finally reached a point in his life where
he can look back and realize that he has managed to prove his
courage and competence, he can move on to bigger and better
things. Depending on how you count it, this is the eighth, ninth,
tenth, or eleventh book in a series--not all are about Miles
or even his extended family. A good place to start is with
the first Vorkosigan story, __. Miles Vorkosigan, secret agent extraordinaire and hero of
six previous Bujold novels, has made a serious error. Not
entirely recovered from the near-fatal injuries sustained in
Mirror Dance (1994), he has a seizure while in combat, nearly
wrecking the mission. Worse yet, fearing that he will be
removed from active duty, he has falsified his report to
Simon Illyan, the chief of Barrayaran Imperial Security.
Illyan, who has perfect memory due to a computer implant,
catches Miles in a lie and so must dismiss him from the
Service. Devastated, Miles contemplates suicide. His career
as a secret agent has propped up a damaged psyche; can he now
live on his own? The Vorkosigan series started out as fairly
lightweight space opera, but Bujold has matured as a writer
over the years, and in such novels as Barrayar (1991) and
Mirror Dance has both moved away from straight action and
shown increasing skill as a delineator of character. Now,
both Miles's strengths and his weaknesses come into play as
he must struggle first with his own failure and then with a
mystery that may have a potentially devastating effect on
Barrayar itself. Not long after dismissing Miles, Illyan, who
holds the safety of the Empire in his hands, begins to forget
things and make serious mistakes himself?and only Miles, now
a civilian with a serious medical disability hanging over his
own head, has the knowledge needed to deal with impending
disaster. Three novels in this series, including Mirror
Dance, have won a Hugo for Best Novel; expect a nomination,
at least, for this compelling new one. Major ad/promo; author
tour.
Amazon.com Review
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.