Thursday, July 19, 2012

Book Review: The Vorkosigan Saga: Ethan of Athos SPOILERS!

Fasten your seat belts for this breakneck pacing that entraps one poor doctor against a certifiable maniac who happens to find Miles attractive. Yeah, that's right. It's Ethan of Athos. Synopsis: Dr. Ethan Urquhart, chief biologist from the all-male world of Athos, must travel to other planets in search of new genetic material, as their current supply of ovarian tissue is no longer viable.
Ethan encounters what to him is practically an alien species--women!--and also finds himself hunted by Cetagandan ghem lords and helped out by Miles' Dendarii officer Elli Quinn.

The novel opens with Dr. Ethan Urquhart helping to birth a child from a uterine replicator. A shipment of new ovaries arrives on Athos, but they're not the ovaries the geneticists of Athos are looking for; they're just animal parts and garbage. The Population Council sends Ethan to Kline Station to figure out what went wrong. He meets Commander Elli Quinn who puts a tracer on Etham that gets him noticed by Cetagandan ghem-Colonel Luyst Millisor and his men (Captain Rau, Sergeant Okita, and Setti). They capture Ethan and interrogate him for seven hours before deciding that he knows nothing. Okita is tasked with making Ethan's death look like an accident, but Quinn puts and end to that by killing Okita and taking Ethan back to her safehouse, much to Ethan's annoyance. She's on Kline Station after accepting a contract from Bharaputra Labratories (via the Dendarii Free Mercenary Fleet and on the orders of Admiral Miles Naismith with whom Elli Quinn is suggested to find Miles quite attractive) to kill Millisor and Okita. After spending days cooped up with a female and talking, Ethan figures out that the shipment switch must've happened before it reached Kline Station. They also meet Helda, a pissed off woman angry at her gay son for fleeing to the all-male planet Athos and hates Athosians with a passion. When tempers flare, Ethan leaves Quinn and returns to his place on Kline Station and meets the young man who is also a telepath and whom one ghem-Colonel Millisor is trying to get his hands on, Terrence Cee.

It turns out that Terrence Cee was shipping his dead telepathic sister to Athos in pieces so that the Athosians could use her DNA to recreate her, though cloning is forbidden on Athos. Ethan is disgusted by this news. After Ethan, Cee, and Quinn devise a plan to smoke Millisor and his gang out and after Quinn's cousin, Teki, is kidnapped and tortured by Millisor and Rau, Ethan and Quinn get Helda and two Kline Station security men to arrest Millisor and Rau (Setti is suspiciously missing). It's then that Ethan figures out that it was Helda who switched the ovaries and burned them in an effort to force her son off Athos and marry a woman and as a bonus, kill off the all-male Athosians. Talk about you're psychotic, purely right-wing Republican hell bent on killing homosexuals. Geez, this lady could use some time in the nuthouse. Helda, thankfully, is imprisoned permanently and Ethan is free to go after answering a few questions. Ethan is about to leave Kline Station when he gets a call from Cee, summoning him to a docking area. Before he arrives, Ethan runs into a stranger who gives Ethan a message capsule for Millisore. At the docking area, Ethan finds Cee held at gunpoint by Millisore and Quinn being held by Setti--Setti, dressed as a Kline Station guard, took Millisor and Rau out of the prison and helped them set this up. Ethan and Quinn activate the devise and watch it kill Millisor and his allies. Turns out that the mystery guy was a member of the House Bharaputra and didn't believe Quinn was moving fast enough. After pardons are paid, Quinn goes back to the Dendarii Free Mercenary Fleet and Ethan with Cee go to Athos. Ethan has what is left of the ovaries via Teki and some new ones donated by Quinn.

All in all, a great paced story with some new insights into Jackson's Whole, genetics, the uterine replicators, and "growing" babies from known male DNA and donated female ovaries. It casts a rather ugly light on how human kind would advance with such a technology, going so far as to program children with telepathic abilities and letting them loose in society without rules.

Book Review: The Vorkosigan Saga: Cetaganda SPOLIERS!

Heavy Cetagandan politics await the reader within. It is wise to have a couple of stress balls nearby so that one doesn't rip up the couch as I did when reading this political thriller that looks short and yet seems to take forever to get anywhere. Synopsis: Miles Vorkosigan and his cousin Ivan are sent on a diplomatic mission to the court of the Cetagandan Empire, Barrayar's former enemy. This sophisticated, genetically advanced but in many ways alien society both fascinates and repels, and when the Cetagandan Empress and her attendant die suddenly, Miles and Ivan find themselves embroiled in intrigues that are hard to fathom. Ivan's romances and Miles' infatuation with a noble Cetagandan lady further complicate matters in this novel by four-time Hugo Award winner Lois McMaster Bujold.

And the synopsis and my review pretty much say the same thing. Nothing much happens and that hits the reader on the head, but the political intrigue is quite under par if one has read David Weber's Honor Harrington series where political intrigue takes stage around book five and up.

Anyway, it starts off, near enough at the beginning and something of a rarety for Bujold, with Miles and his cousin Ivan Vorpatil arriving at Cetaganda to attend a funeral of the late haut Empress dowager when they run into a ba--genetically engineered sexless slave--and attain a rod. Miles suggests they keep it much to Ivan's annoyance. Vorob'yev--a Barrayan ambassador to Cetaganda--ushers Miles and Ivan to a function/party-thing where Miles becomes ill after staring at a multicolored object (I can't quite remember what it is at this exact moment). During a second function, Ba Lura--a slave of the late Empress--shows Miles to haut Rian Degtiar who demands that Miles return the rod he stole. Miles being Miles, says he left it at the Barrayan embassy (which he did, but Rian doesn't seem to believe him until he starts taking an interest into how Barrayar could be set up to look like it stole the rod). The funeral interrupts them and they part ways with Rian promising to send for Miles again. During the funeral, Miles witnesses Ba Lura kill itself--or so he thinks. A few days go by, one ending with Ivan being poisoned and can't "perform" well for two attractive Cetagandan women, before Miles and Rian meet again.

This time, Miles gives her the rod and she identifies it as a copy of the Great Key of the Star Creche that unlocks the haut genetic bank(s) and Miles promises to help her solve the mystery of where the real Key is and who killed Ba Lura, since Miles is beginning to doubt that Ba Lura's suicide was as simple as it looked. Over the course of nine days, Miles and Rian manage to piece together that Ba Lura was persuaded by Ilsun Keyt, ghem-General Naru, haut Nadina and haut Vio d'Chilian to give them the real key for the Empress' project (which takes away the power that the Star Creche has in deciding who's DNA gets paired with who's) and gives Ba Lura a copy to drop off with the arriving Barrayan ambassadors (Miles and Ivan) so Keyt can urge the Cetagandans to declare war on Barrayar again, something neither Miles nor the Emperor of Cetaganda want.

After Vio tries to kidnap Ivan believing he's the brain behind the whole thing--something that irks Miles to no end--Miles, Rian and a few other trusted haut women corner Vio and take her down. Miles, with haut Pel, decide to board Keyt's ship and retrieve the real Key and rescue Nadina (who has been held captive since a meeting between the haut women to hand over all their genetic material banks to recreate a new Key). After retrieving the real Key and Nadina, Keyt and Naru corner them but the arrival of ghem-Colonel Benin (who has been following Miles since Miles showed interest in Ba Lura's death and is tasked with finding the murderer) shows up with Ivan and a few Cetagandan guards. They arrest Keyt and Naru and Benin takes Miles, Pel, and Nadina to meet the Emperor haut Fletchir Giaja who demands answers. 

Rian and Miles tell all and, in a meeting between Giaja and the haut woman which Miles gets to sit in on, learns that Naru will be executed while Keyt and Vio are to be offered retirement (Keyt)/become a sexless slave (Vio) or suicide. Ghem-General Benin, recently promoted, escorts Miles back to the Barrayan embassy, then takes him the following morning to Giaja. Giaja awards Miles the Cetagandan Order of Merit and orders Miles to accompany him to a ceremony where Giaja will choose the next haut Empress. It is then that Rian (who has been secretly starting to love Miles and Miles is showing interest in her) gives Miles her bracelet for Miles to remember her by as it is the only thing she truly owns. Giaja appoints Rian as the Empress and they become married--which is it's own awkward thing on Cetaganda for neither partner actually has sex with the other, just the same haut-genetic breeding the rest get. As Miles and Ivan leave Cetaganda, Miles points out that he and Giaja aren't done with each other yet.

All in all, a good political thriller in the Vorkosigan saga that details (quite excruciatingly at times) the Cetagandan politics and all their traps and snares. Nevertheless, a decent, if somewhat heavy politicking at times, addition to the series.