A Civil Campaign (A Miles Vorkosigan adventure)
Book details
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherEarthlight
- Publication date4 July 2000
- ISBN-100743408292
- ISBN-13978-0743408295
Book overview
Amazon Review
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' clone brother Mark arrives. He has brought a brilliant but scatterbrained scientist who has 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 award nominee, likely to add another statue to Bujold's already full shelf. It's charming, touching, and quite funny too. --Nona Vero
About the author
Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.A science fiction legend, Lois McMaster Bujold is one of the most highly regarded speculative fiction writers of all time. She has won three Nebula Awards and six Hugo Awards, four for best novel, which matches Robert A. Heinlein's record. Bujold's Miles Vorkosigan saga is a massively popular science fiction mainstay. The mother of two, Ms. Bujold lives in Minneapolis.
Product information
| Publisher | Earthlight (4 July 2000) |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Paperback | 416 pages |
| ISBN-10 | 0743408292 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0743408295 |
| Best Sellers Rank |
1,663,173 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
18,594 in Science Fiction Space Operas
24,424 in Science Fiction Adventure (Books)
66,452 in Adventure Stories & Action
|
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,608Reviews |
Customers say
Customers find the humor funny and witty. They describe the book as entertaining and well-paced. Readers also say the characters always seem real.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the humor in the book funny but not silly. They describe it as a deft, frothy, and beautifully plotted comedy of manners and absurdities. Readers also find the book very entertaining and well-paced.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"Witty without being self-conscious, funny but not silly, this novel about Miles Vorkosigan's "campaign" to marry Ekaterin is the rest of the story..." Read more
"...It's a deft, frothy, beautifully plotted comedy of manners and absurdities...." Read more
"...fiction, I was amazed at how well it all worked and found it a very entertaining and well paced read...." Read more
"...in the regency tradition, and it is extremely, and continuously, funny...." Read more
Customers find the book entertaining, well-written, and well-paced. They say it pulls them in and pulls along at a good pace.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...Honour (book1) and Barrayer (book7) also pair really well and are brilliant reads." Read more
"Thoroughly good read 😀..." Read more
"...All done with a light touch and so well-written you feel you have met the characters in real life, or wish you could." Read more
"...at how well it all worked and found it a very entertaining and well paced read...." Read more
Customers find the characters in the book to be real.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...She delivers excellent world-building, sympathetic characters and a narrative that pulls you in and pulls you along at a good pace...." Read more
"...picked up from the free-and-easy planet Beta, and the subsidiary characters are very enjoyable - funny without being caricatures...." Read more
"...She is a master craftsman, her characters always seem real (villains have their virtues and heroes their vices), and she does not overlook the..." Read more
Top reviews from United Kingdom
Frankly this has more akin to Jane Austin with hints of PG Wodehouse than most space opera - albeit with elements of biogenetics and micro-economics, a huge dollop of political machination, uterine replicators and, of course, butter bugs! There are multiple romantic episodes and entanglements, all with quirks and twists.
Reading Miles's letter of apology literally brought tears to my eyes - not a common event while reading space opera ( perhaps occasionally when reading Weber and now, more frequently, Bujold) - this after a dinner party which had elements of pure farce. There is literally something for everyone in this novel. I have not been more diverted by a book in years. I usually combine mostly listening to the audiobook, with occasional reading if I have both media to hand. With "A Civil Campaign" I was compelled to read most of the book so that I could find out what happens next more quickly. ( that's not to say that the narrator was not great as usual! - he was!) I am tempted to say that you would not need to read the previous books first to enjoy this one, but I think you would miss a lot off the back-story references and you would lack the deep knowledge of the main characters which really makes this story outstanding.
Have I made it clear how much I loved reading this book!
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The series is long and suggested routes through it can be found in lots of the reviews. This book (12) cannot really be read as a stand-alone, but relies on Komarr (11) to set the scene. You can skip the others and these two together will still make sense.
The risk is that having started, you'll find yourself enthralled and keep going.
Shards of Honour (book1) and Barrayer (book7) also pair really well and are brilliant reads.
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Miles' attempts to court Ekaterin do not work out as he expects, at least not at first. In the meantime his "clone-brother" Mark also has a girlfriend with her own ideas, picked up from the free-and-easy planet Beta, and the subsidiary characters are very enjoyable - funny without being caricatures. The humour is sophisticated and sometimes sly. I am not interested in descriptions of alien technology or battles in space and this book has none of these at all. There is political intrigue and a subtle and realistic interweaving of future technology and human behaviour in a modern feudal society. All done with a light touch and so well-written you feel you have met the characters in real life, or wish you could.
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This book is one of her best, it will still be a good read if you've not read the others in the series, but it certainly helps to be familiar with the characters and Barrayar. On another note it's the first time we see so may different POVs in her books and it works splendidly. I love the deeper look at Ivan, Kareen and Mark and those sub plots are some of the best parts of the book.
The Emperor Gregor is getting married and mischief (and Murder?) abounds?
The plot is a cross between Regency Romances ala Austen and Heyer and a Shakespearean comedy of errors, (or in this case Of Biology and Manners), what with widows to be woowed, political plots to be thwarted and "girl dresses up as boy" plots taken to the next level and the course of true love never did run smooth..........with spaceships!
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If Jane Austen wrote science fiction, it would be like this!
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Top reviews from other countries
What makes this particular book so interesting is that it neatly pulls off a transition from fast paced, kinetic space adventures to a more subtle sort of political thriller. In the earlier parts of this series, Miles is a young man, dashing about the galaxy to solve problems with carefully planned violence. And that makes for very engaging reading. In A Civil Campaign, however, we catch Miles completing a transition to a more dignified middle age, where his problems are less easily addressed by brute force.
The truly remarkable thing is that this book is just as engaging and readable as its predecessors, despite the changes in the pacing. So be forewarned that I don't think Miles handles a weapon even once in this book, but buy it and read it anyway.
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I love the whole of the Vorkosigan series. But this book has so many different interesting ideas and storylines. It is also my comfort book that i ready whenever i am sick or sad. However often i ready it, it is still exiting, touching and makes me laugh out loudly at some passages.
It is book 12 of the Vorkosigan series and i think you get the most out of it if you read at least some of the others before. Some aspects are even funnier if you know the protagonists better.
But i would bet if you start with this book you will end up wanting to read all the others, too.
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LMB dedicates the book to an impressive list - Jane, Charlotte, Georgette, and Dorothy. I can draw some fascinating comparisons between A Civil Campaign and their works (well, the ones I’m most familiar with -- I admit to having never read Heyer). Actually, the fact that Miles and Ekaterin’s storyline is pretty much just a homage to Sayers’s Lord Peter and Harriet Vane (who are probably my favourite book couple evah) was probably the biggest reason I was swooning over this book, and Ekaterin and Miles’s scenes in particular. I feel like I need to write a thesis to explain how a couple in a scifi book, set on another planet and in the future, are almost exactly the same as a couple who solve mysteries in a series of novels set in England in the 1920s.
To keep it more brief though - Both Miles and Peter are considered less attractive than the women they’ve fallen for, leaving all and sundry to assume they’ve somehow used their peerage to trick their respective leading ladies into a relationship; Ekaterin and Harriet are both victims of domestic abuse where their past partners have not hit them but belittled them constantly; Miles and Peter are both mindful of the abuse and are incredibly honorable in wanting to fiercely protect Ekaterin and Harriet from slander and character assassination; instead of the typical alpha male protection though, Miles/Peter [perhaps unknowingly] give the girls a chance to recognise their inner strength and ability to fight misogyny and injustice in their own dignified and intelligent way; Miles/Peter’s wit and intelligence are what attracts these (outwardly seemingly) more attractive women; and, in the end, whilst Miles and Peter are plotting, it’s Ekaterin and Harriet who end up rescuing their beaus.
I can also see the similarities to Austen’s books. For starters, there’s a heavy focus on family and siblings. Besides Miles’s rocky relationship with his clone brother, Mark, the familial plots feature Ekaterin’s brother and brother-in-law’s ‘helpful’ response to her association to Miles (very Sense and Sensibility-like), the four Koudelka sisters (the daughters of the second novel Barrayar’s Kou and Drou acting very Bennet and/or Dashwood sisters-like) , and Miles’s pseudo brothers Ivan and Gregor.
She also, like Jane and Dorothy etc, added a healthy helping of hidden feminism. There is no weak Koudelka sister, physically or mentally. Strong independent women each one, a credit to their parents, which becomes the great irony of the plot as Kou, after raising these superwomen, forgets the independence he and his wife have nurtured for so long by attempting to stifle it. One of the best scenes in the book is my beloved Cordelia pointing out the error in his judgement when it comes to Mark’s relationship with one of his girl’s (Kareen). Kou’s cry that Cordelia isn’t fighting fair with the addition of an old couch is all sorts of hilarious for those who’ve read Barrayar .
Seriously, LMB was on point with her humour throughout this book. There’s a whole wedding proposal going awry plot point which plays out during a dinner party which, without doubt, is probably the funniest thing I’ve ever read. I am not exaggerating when I say I laughed out loud and almost had tears streaming down my face at one stage. The book is worth reading for this scene alone. (And let me just mention - slight (view spoiler)
Besides the dinner party and couch scene, I felt like Cordelia and Aral need to be added to the great comedy duos of all time -- all their scenes are hilarious but I especially laughed at their reflections on meeting Ekaterin for the first time. There’s also Gregor’s straight faced delivery of one-liners, mostly in response to something Miles, Ivan, or Ekaterin’s son might have done. And there’s Ivan - full stop - hilarious - one of his closing scenes made me whoop with laughter (besides me yelling ‘I knew it!’).
And I haven’t started on the butter bugs… (They’re difficult to explain, just read the thing. Or maybe a couple of the books prior to this one first. I don’t think this is one you can just pick up and understand all the humour etc without reading some of the others in the series.)
Highly recommended obviously. Definitely a favourite. 5 out of 5
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Non servono le avventure spaziali per rendere appassionanti i libri della saga vorkosigan
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