Great book, as usual :)
I'm also extremely impressed with the quality levels of your books even in eARC phase - a lot better than the final product for other authors.
Jole and Cordelia were great viewpoint characters.
The only bad thing is now I want a glass-bottomed boat (and an interesting lake to use it on)...
I'm also extremely impressed with the quality levels of your books even in eARC phase - a lot better than the final product for other authors.
Jole and Cordelia were great viewpoint characters.
The only bad thing is now I want a glass-bottomed boat (and an interesting lake to use it on)...



Well, not total chance... of all the herms in the Nexus, Bel was probably the one most primed to target Barrayarans.
Details left to your imaginations, but no question who seduced who.
Ta, L.
Well, not total chance... of all the herms in the Nexus, Bel was probably the one most primed to target Barrayarans.
Right - it was pretty clear (to me) that Bel was probably acting as an ImpSec agent, maybe doing a security check on Jole - not as innocent a week as Jole thought. (That assumes I've got the timeline right - this was after Bel got fired from the Dendarii, right?)
Right - it was pretty clear (to me) that Bel was probably acting as an ImpSec agent, maybe doing a security check on Jole - not as innocent a week as Jole thought. (That assumes I've got the timeline right - this was after Bel got fired from the Dendarii, right?)


Right - it was pretty clear (to me) that Bel was probably acting as an ImpSec a..."
I'm not at all sure that ImpSec had anything to do with it, at the time. In retrospect, maybe... but I doubt either party was talking much.
Ta, L.
but I doubt either party was talking much.
I got "checking security for ImpSec" from Jole saying
Although I have to say, the herm was not so bad, as Betans went. Had the most endless fund of bizarre questions about Barrayar and Barrayarans, though.
I got "checking security for ImpSec" from Jole saying
Although I have to say, the herm was not so bad, as Betans went. Had the most endless fund of bizarre questions about Barrayar and Barrayarans, though.


I got "checking security for ImpSec" from Jole saying
Although I have to say, the herm was not so bad, as Betans went. Had the most endless fund of biza..."
Aha. No, I was thinking of all Bel's frustrations re: Miles, its hopeless crush of the (recent) past.
No reason it couldn't be both, I suppose.
Ta, L.
Until he said the captain asked questions about Barrayar, I thought maybe Thornes are the herm equivalent of Smiths or Joneses, and the name is just a coincidence :)

I loved that we had Cordelia as a POV character again. We hadn't really had a chance to be inside her head since Barrayar and it was so nice to hear her voice, which is so different than Miles.
I adored Oliver Jole. Adored him to bits. I'm so so so glad that both he and Cordelia have found happiness post-Aral, both in each other and in their future children.
And the little mentions that you dropped, from the throwaway mention of Bel Thorne as a past fling for Jole, to Miles and Ekaterin naming a daughter Taura (and didn't that just punch me in the gut there), to the mountain-top memorial for the long-dead Reg Rosemont and all the memories of Shards of Honor that brought up, to the secret history of the Cetagandan Invasion which made all the past events look very different...
...also reflected in the revelation of the Cordelia-Aral-Jole partnership of twenty-ish years, which makes me want to re-read all of the previous books yet again so I can look at them in a new light.
I do think this is my favorite Vorkosigan book since A Civil Campaign.

That ocean-side (big lake-side?) plot of land sounds idyllic! So, are they going to raise the kids as siblings, then, but in different houses?

Ha ha ha! Indeed. The revelation about Bel was perhaps more surprising to me than the one about Aral! I am curious about when in the timeline that happened.

I appreciate your willingness to tackle difficult and perhaps less commercially-viable topics with no punches pulled. A lot like Cordelia actually.
I really felt like this book was a warm hug to your long-time fans. Thank you.


Huh. What were your illusions about Aral and Cordelia, that being dis't of them was so distressing?
Always curious about variety in reader-response, L.

The possibility was there from the time I wrote The Vor Game, but held aside in what I call "Schrodinger's Cat Carrier". Exploring same didn't belong in the books I was writing then, not to mention I didn't think the commercial market would be friendly to the development. (I've had many ideas over the years for series stories; few are chosen, most fall by the wayside. I never know which are alive and which are dead till I open the box/write the story.) But for whatever reason, I didn't write anything that would rule it out. I didn't come up with the idea of Aral and Cordelia and Jole on Sergyar till after I wrote Mirror Dance, so part two was not in my eye till then. But finally, the time was right and the ideas were ripe.
Ta, L.


It's Russian, I suspect you know by now. I first ran across it attached to Andrei Kosigan, ambassador to the UN in my youth.
Ta, L.


I couldn't help thinking of it the other way around - the whole last two thirds of the book I was praying for the scene where Miles finds out about Oliver and Bel! Lois, you MUST have written it, right? Even if just for private amusement? :)
I really enjoyed the book, but it struck me as very much 'for the fans' - I'd be curious if that was a concern for the publisher. Probably the majority of the material in the book only works if you know all the history.
As a gay guy I've always been really thankful for Aral as a character, but especially with this book, I can't help noticing that when Lois really focuses on a romantic pairing, it always seems to be hetero (please excuse any I'm forgotting, she's written a lot of books!). Even Miles and Bel is not, really, about Bel so very much; again it's a while since I've read those books but my memory is that Bel isn't so much present in that relationship as a main character but is more of a sort of cipher for Miles' discomfort with, you know, modernity in general. I'm not going to start writing letters in red crayon or leading torch-bearing mobs, or anything, it just seems interesting given that she's clearly entirely fine with non-standard sexuality and relationships in the abstract that we don't seem to get many of them in detail - maybe it's just a case of not being confident in doing them justice? I'd be curious to know, if Lois is willing to tell! (Or of course if I'm forgetting some great pairing and am consequently talking through my hat).

My favorite insight is on how having children can change your past as well as your future. I recall a similar observation in CvPA.

Well, I shall not attempt to talk you out of having had the reading experience you did -- always a futile exercise -- but I will present a few other angles.
A friend of mine who had health issues that he thought, correctly as it turned out, would make him short-lived, once said he would never marry, because he did not want to leave a widow. However, he did eventually find a loving poly relationship, which solved that problem for him. (Still devastated the survivors, but at least they weren't left alone, which was apparently his horror.) Aral was always less in denial about his likely lifespan than Cordelia was. When Jole wonders if Aral meant him and Cordelia to inherit each other, he's closer to the mark than he realizes.
Another: as Cordelia ruefully realized, not too far along in her time with Aral, she was in a poly relation from the beginning -- him, her, and Barrayar. Adding Jole was hardly a stretch for her after that, him being far less high-maintenance. Plus, Betan. Really, she always was, if alas hopelessly renegade on issues of reproduction.
Fwiw, the first 20 years remain much as you pictured. I can assure you Aral loved Cordelia with all his passionate soul from the hour they met till the hour he died; no change there, either. Their relationship may may be more than you imagined, but it was never less.
bests, Lois

After Aral. Claiming him emotionally without entangling anyone legally.
Also because Cordelia may be a little geeky about naming. She might think better of it as she goes along.
Ta, L.


I couldn't help thinking of it the other way around - the whol..."
Have you forgotten Ethan Urquhart? Mislaid an entire planet...?
Viz: detail, you may have noticed (or, if you have an especially vivid imagination, maybe not) that all the sex scenes in the VK books are fade-to-black mode. By this time, it's sort of a branding issue. Rather a lot of my readers claim vociferously to not want chocolate in their peanut butter; how George R. R. Martin and Laurel Hamilton are achieving their sales figures is in this light a mystery.
Ta, L.
Ah. This whole series might be enlightening...
http://kriswrites.com/2014/01/08/the-...

>"The only decision I ever made that put my heart on the line like that..." He stopped rather abruptly.
>
>"Mm?"
>
>"Wasn't about a woman," he finished. He added after a meditative silence, "It was about ambition, though. Um. Yeah. I don't think I envy Oliver his dilemma."
My best guess (that doesn't involve a woman) is... the lie about Lieutenant Vorberg?

>"The only decision I ever made tha..."
By extension... Miles was thinking of the wrestling-with-temptation scene, two falls out of three.
Ta, L.

Lovely read, although as someone who never bonded with Aral I had to work to accept the Aral-is-the-center-of-everything-in-the-universe part.
This seems to be a book about The Making of a Parent as much as anything.
One minor niggle... There is much discussion of Cordelia's eggs that were harvested after the soltoxin. But she mentions eggs that were harvested pre-Aral on Beta Colony. Are they still around? It feels like a loose thread.

Lovely read, although as someone who never bonded with Aral I had to work to accept the Aral-is-the-center-of-everything-in-the-universe part...."
Yes, I had that niggle too. I decided to leave it unaddressed for now. There are several possibilities, including eggs destroyed if not claimed by such-and-such a date, or Cordelia losing legal control of them due to any number of reasons including her criminal charges or her renouncing her Betan citizenship, and so on. They are Eggs That Do Not Enter Into This Story, anyway.
Ta, L.

I think I found it harder to imagine a 76 year old grandmother having 6 new children than the Aral-Jole-Cordelia scenario. Thank you for the Miles, Cordelia and Jole viewpoints that made me giggle.

And I'm going to have to reread before I can say anything sensible.
There was some internet discussion that I read, a few years ago, about Chekov's gun: " If you say in the first chapter that there is a rifle hanging on the wall, in the second or third chapter it absolutely must go off." (from Wikipedia)
One of my favourite reads round that time was Forrest Reid's 'Young Tom' and I liked it precisely because the rifles are never fired.
For me, 'Gentleman Jole...' was a similar reading experience, but I need to reread it to know how many of the rifles were actually on the walls, and how many I hung there myself. I blame Miles, a bit. If Prince Serg had been decommissioned on his watch, it would never have gone so smoothly.
Overall, I'm just really pleased for Cordelia - it's not that I'd have expected anything less from her, but I like knowing how her story is continuing. (She hasn't thought it through, though. In fifteen years time her idyll is going to be shattered by endless arguments about who borrowed whose Sergyarian hair straightners...)

I was surprised by the poly aspect and Aral and Jole's long term relationship. I hadn't vaguely thought about it. I guess I'm not a good 'shipper.
I had wondered how, or if, you would continue the series without Aral.
Thank you for handling this with your usual grace and style. It was both beautifully written and fun.

Well, look, in my defence it's just *one* planet! There's so many lying around here! :)
Yes, of course I had - silly me. (And it's one of my favourite books, too! All the business with environmental regulations cracks me up every time, and how many books can you write *that* about?). And Ethan is indeed a great character. I have to be honest and say it's been a while since I read that one too and I don't entirely remember how much of a love story he gets in it - I remember we get a lot of his existing relationship back story. Of course, one of the questions of that book is what does sexuality mean in a situation where you really don't have many choices? Is Ethan *gay*, exactly? But yup, I had entirely forgotten him when I wrote my initial comment. :)

I will say that I reached the end of the book and felt it came a little quickly, if only because - unlike all the other books in the Vorkosigan Saga - there wasn't any obvious crisis that needed to be dealt with! This isn't to say that the emotional drama wasn't gripping enough, but all the other books seemed to feature *some* escapade and I was oddly ... unsatisfied that the Ghem Consul, Plascrete and Kareenburg complaint threads were so neatly wrapped up. Some part of me expected one of them to escalate and require a Military and Civil authority team-up to resolve :D

What, you missed the Great Picnic Blowup...?
Explosions! Fire! His soon-to-be-adopted planet bio-napalming the Admiral of Sergyar Fleet in front of hundreds of witnesses! People running in circles screaming! Oliver (with his shirt off, no less) heroically throwing his body across Miles's children to save them! (Cordelia appreciated that one. On so many levels...)
The rest being just Cordelia and Oliver doing the jobs they are paid for, quietly and competently. Which pretty much cuts escalation off at the knees before it can jump, alas.
:-), L.

:-), L. "
Hahaha - I would classify that more as an exciting incident rather than a major crisis. Sorry Lois, but once you've raised the stakes to surprise invasions, sinking buildings and butter bug bombardment, the bar is set pretty high :D


No book tour this round, sorry, I pleaded my arthritic spine, which does not get along well these days with airplane seats, hotel beds, and travel stress, and escaped.
There will be a limited signed hc edition, about which I will have more information a bit later, and of course Uncle Hugo's Science Fiction Bookstore here in Minneapolis will have signed copies, and does mail-order to all seven continents.
Ta, L.

Christopher: I wouldn't say the Cetagandan diplomatic situation was 'neatly wrapped up', exactly - not in the sense that it was badly written, I mean, but in the sense that it leaves some interesting threads dangling that could certainly be taken up in future if Lois wants to go in that direction. It leaves several opportunities for the Cetagandans to take offence in different directions, and if there's one thing Cetagandans are good at...

:-), L. "
Hahaha - I would classify that more as an exciting incident rather than a major crisis. Sorry Lois, but once you've raised the ..."
Yes, this is an inherent problem with on-going series. If you aren't going to offer Bigger and Bigger (always trending in the one direction), what else can you do to raise the stakes? The canonical example is the Doc Smith tales, which progressed from blowing up spaceships to planets to solar systems to entire galaxies. (Although little else than the scale changed.) Many writers have made a fine living with this sort of scheme.
Or one can find another direction altogether, and explore a new unknown.
Ta, L. Thinking that Tolkien was artistically lucky to have been stopped at four.

Oh I agree that all of those threads could certainly be expanded in the future - but for the context of *this* story they've all been more or less dealt with. I would also be amused if Plas Dan came back as the 'big bad' in the future, but as long as Lois doesn't introduce Radial Kaiju lurking in the depths of Lake Serena, I would enjoy reading more books set on Sergyar ;)

Well, I'm glad for you that you escaped, sorry for us! I'll look for the signed hardcopy info, then. And look forward to reading the rest of the comments and answers.

Since you mention collecting typos, here are three more:
I have Blaise Gatti go find a classroom of ten-year-olds to test them on. -- had Blaise Gatti
It seems to have been rough sailing for both them. -- both of them
She didn’t break confidentiality, I guessed. -- I think a semicolon would do better than a comma.

Yes, one of the many long pauses in the composition of this book was over the question of whether to let Miles in, and if I would lose control of the tale if I did. Denying him the viewpoint seemed to do well at keeping him under control, however. And good grief, he's hogged the viewpoint enough already.
Miles wasn't the hero this round; he was the mid-book crisis, and quite nonplussed with the demotion.
Ta, L.
It does make me very happy to know the formal release will be the week preceding my 30th birthday, though. ;) I think I know what Amie will be getting me as a present. Who's reading this one in audio, do you know? I don't have most of the Vorkosiverse in audio because I so dislike Gardner's reading (sorry!), unfortunately.
To be honest, I was quite surprised by the amount of my headcanon that was confirmed in this book, and said so (without spoiling) in my review proper. I always did think Aral and Jole might have been involved on the quiet, and that Cordelia wouldn't mind, so long as she wasn't kept in the dark about it.
The triad aspect to that marriage made me very happy - it has always been very uncommon for a polyamorous relationship to be essentially validated in fiction without explicit content like a threesome, or being mistreated as one side of a pair cheating with a third party. This is much more what it's really like, especially in the existing legal climate(s) where only two members of any polyamorous relationship can marry each other and that's treated as though their relationship is more important and the other people just playthings.
Whoever helped you with your research, Lois, you've done very well in this. Hence the hug in my spoiler-free comment. ;)
I have to hop off now - volunteering at a literature festival event in an hour. Will post more later, probably.