Series: Book 13 in the Saga Vorkosigan series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-SciFi, Lang:en
Summary
If you relish costume adventure in an intergalactic
society starring strong, convincing male
and female characters, you'll adore the __ and
A Civil Campaign. Read them, and then go back and
catch the previous
nine books (10 if you count
, which features not Miles but his partner, Ellie
Quinn); or read the series in order, starting with the
romance of Miles's parents in .
A Civil Campaign opens where
Komarr ends, with Miles determined to court
Ekaterin. Unfortunately, his approach is described as
"General Romeo Vorkosigan, the one-man strike force." By his
father. The potential for comic disaster increases
when Miles's clone brother Mark arrives. He's brought a
brilliant but scatterbrained scientist who's created a bug
producing a perfect food: bug butter. They set up a lab in
the basement of Vorkosigan House. Mark has also found a nice
Barrayaran girl--she even likes the bugs--with whom he got
together on the sexually liberated world of Beta. But now
Kareen's living at home. Naturally, disaster strikes,
repeatedly and on all fronts. Bujold unfolds her comedy of manners while continuing to
explore familiar themes: the difficulties in becoming a
strong adult woman in a patriarchy, the need for trust and
honesty in relationships between the sexes, the difference
between appearance and identity, and the impact of advanced
biotechnologies on society.
A Civil Campaign is a sure-fire Hugo and Nebula
nominee, likely to add another statue to Bujold's already
full shelf. It's charming, touching, and quite funny too.
--Nona Vero
Bujold dedicates her new novel to the Bront?s, Georgette
Heyer and Dorothy Sayers, which gives a pretty good
indication of the territory she's staked out in this
well-done addition (after Komarr) to her popular Miles
Vorkosigan series. Miles, forced by ill heath to give up his
military career and having embarked on a second career as an
Imperial Auditor (a kind of peripatetic judge and
ambassador), is madly in love with the beautiful and
brilliant Ekaterin Vorsoisson. Unfortunately, Ekaterin is the
recent widow of a crooked government official whose death
Miles holds himself partially responsible for. Their
courtship is made even more difficult by a series of
interrelated events. First, Emperor Gregor is getting
married, and Miles, like everyone else in the government, is
caught up in the complex social and diplomatic whirl
surrounding the impending nuptials. Second, Miles's
disaster-prone clone brother, Mark, has concocted a scheme to
make a fortune marketing "butter bugs," unattractive,
cockroachlike creatures that secrete a bland tofulike food
product. Worse, Mark has set up his laboratory in Vorkosigan
House, the bugs have gotten loose and Miles's parents, Lord
Aral and Lady Cordelia, are due home any second. And then
there's the dirty infighting going on in the Council of
Counts over who should inherit two vacant districts, plus an
attempt to frame Miles for murder. Through all these often
hilarious and occasionally dangerous incidents, Miles strives
heroically to keep his eye on the prizeAthe winning of
Ekaterin's hand in marriage. Bujold successfully mixes quirky
humor with just enough action, a dab of feminist social
commentary and her usual superb character development in a
sprightly SF romance that her many fans will find enormously
satisfying. (Sept.) FYI: Bujold has won four Hugos and two
Nebulas for books and stories in the Miles Vorkosigan series.
Amazon.com Review
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.