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Barrayar (Vorkosigan) Barrayar by Lois McMaster Bujold


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
Sequel to Shards of Honor. Aral becomes regent, Cordelia becomes pregnant, and a civil war and personal violence threaten both.



Hmm. Yeah, okay, this one stands up much better than the prequel. Which, duh, she wrote it much later. This is one of those books where I think my ambivalence is personal rather than literary. This is a book about the price of parenthood – it's bursting with interlocked parental/child constellations, each revolving to different drums – and while I appreciate it as a narrative, it's not a subject I personally care much about. Right now, possibly ever. And I'm a bit alienated by the way this book – and some of the series later – talks about children. There's a gentle flavor of moral imperative about it, and I'm thinking and thinking and failing to come up with anyone in this entire series who doesn't construct large portions of their psychology or identity around reproduction. Mark, maybe, though I'd actually argue he's still a teenager in the way he's focused on his own, er, genesis. Ivan, I suppose, is the closest you get to an alternative perspective, which . . . huh.



Aaanyway. She writes beautifully about that, but I'm still alienated in flickers here and there. The thing I'm not alienated by is the abbreviated abortion debate we get here, with the conservative Barrayarans calling to abort a child that the liberal Cordelia insists on preserving. It's not actually as nuanced as I'd like, and one of these days I'll articulate some of the slivers of problematic theory that pricked at me this time through from a disability studies perspective, but it's there.




View all my reviews.

Date: 2009-01-11 02:04 am (UTC)
readerjane: Book Cat (Default)
From: [personal profile] readerjane
The thing that struck me the most about that debate in Barrayar was my disappointment in Aral. I was glad he chose to support Cordelia, saying to Piotr "You are my past. She is my future." I was disappointed, however, that Aral wasn't showing any determination to defend his son. If it were Cordelia who didn't want to go through with the pregnancy, Aral never would have come up with the idea of using the uterine replicator to let Miles have a chance at life even though his mother didn't want to gestate him. Miles wasn't real to Aral yet -- and while I guess I can understand how an unborn might not feel as real to his father as he felt to his mother, I still wanted to see Aral defend him.

Date: 2009-01-12 09:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] charlie-ego.livejournal.com
Yeah - though I like the parenthood arcs (as I'm in a differnt slice of life than you), I do suspect Bujold rather of stacking the deck on Barryar's (the planet, that is) history and sociology so that it's basically inconceivable for anyone on that planet not to have a moral imperative towards reproduction.

Now, Beta Colony, I could see how it might produce people like Cordelia (who chafe against the reproduction limits) but yes, it would be nice to see the flip side of that-- you'd think it would also give rise to a lot of people who find satisfaction in other pursuits, which never even gets mentioned except for the off-screen evil promotion-hungry Cordelia-ex-lover who lied about children!

On the other hand... Elli Quinn doesn't seem to be at all interested in parenthood, right? She's pretty awesome. And it makes sense for her to have a very different outlook on this than your average maniacal Vor, the same way that a US educated woman will have a very different outlook on this than, oh, my equally-educated Korean relatives.

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