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rivka
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Feb 02, 2016 10:08AM

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Interesting! It was claimed to me that the newsletter went out to 35 million subscribers, but that does not mean that 35 million will actually read it, rather than deleting it unread. Still, even a tiny fraction of that is a lot of eyeballs. It reminds me of that old publishing saw about publicity -- "We know that only 20% of book promotion works, but we don't know which 20%, so we do it all."
Ta, L.

Thank you for an extra Christmas this year!

Ha, nice boyfriend! Here is me, signing (possibly) your very book:
https://www.goodreads.com/author_blog...
To repeat what is becoming my mantra: this is not an action-adventure tale, so don't plunge in expecting it to turn into one, lest your reading be artificially confused.
Ta, L.

Sadly I can't order one of the signed English copies (amazon.de)- do you think they'll be available later this week/month or aren't there any for the German speaking countries? I'd rather wait than getting this novel as an e-book, that would totally mess with my LMB bookshelf at home.
Greetings from Austria, Christina

Sadly I can't order one of the signed English copies (amazon.de)- do you think they'll be availa..."
Sorry, I have no idea how the signed limited edition is distributed.
However, if you want a signed Bujold book, personalized by request, you can get them at any time from Uncle Hugo's Science Fiction Bookstore here in Minneapolis. They do mail order to all seven continents.
http://www.unclehugo.com/prod/index.s...
Ta, L.

Sadly I can't order one of the signed English copies (amazon.de)- do you think they'll be availa..."
Hi Christina, I've found a version that seems to be the signed edition on amazon.de here:
http://www.amazon.de/Gentleman-Queen-...
I actually ordered my copy off Thalia, it was a couple euros cheaper there (however, shipping takes a little longer):
http://www.thalia.de/shop/home/sugges...
Hope that helps :)


I had no idea you'd been writing the series for 30 years. When I read the earlier books - I never felt like they were dated (and I think that about a lot of books from the 80s).

But, yes, as always, I love the book! Thank you for writing it.

I have a pretty healthy to-be-read list, but somehow, the series is calling to me for another from-the-beginning-reread.........
Thank you!




I thank you, my checking account thanks you...
:-), L.

I think FB, overall, has more denizens, but Goodreads is more subject-focused, which I appreciate. All books, all the time...
Ta, L.

Did you always know those relationships were there when you were writing the old books where our Gentleman appears? I have to admit I was hooked and cackling in Chapter one when Cordelia is entirely Betan about it all.
Wonderful addition to the family.... can't wait for the next although I'm sure that's not what you want to hear just at this time heheh.

I inhaled GJ&TRQ in about a day... only holding out that long because it's such a happy, rare thing to read a Bujold book for the first time. Question and a Statement/Question:
Question: does a Betan woman in midlife (70s) still have a menstrual cycle? For that matter, in an age of uterine replicators do many women who aren't trying to harvest eggs choose to have a monthly cycle? I'm not sure why this occurred to me about 3/4 of the way through the book, but it did.
Statement/Question: as the novel closed, it felt like a farewell not just to Cordelia and her story but to the Vorkosigan story itself. Cordelia has come full-circle to a quiet life in Sergyar; Miles is middle aged (by Barryaran standards) and happy-comfortable with his lot in life. I do not long for this event, this ending, this coda, but has it happened?
Sincerely,
Brad Berens

Question: does a Betan woman in midlife (70s) still have a menstrual cycle? For that matter, in an age of uterine replicators do many women who aren't trying to harvest eggs choose to have a monthly cycle? I'm not sure why this occurred to me about 3/4 of the way through the book, but it did.
LMB: I did not go into the state of Cordelia's uterus, for fear of of a certain component of the readership fleeing in droves, so I didn't have to decide. As a gene-cleaned Betan, she probably hasn't suffered cancer, so she may still posses all her original organs, but the limiting factor on late reproduction is not the age of the woman but the age of her eggs. All the eggs she will ever have develop during gestation, and by 40 or 50 years on, are getting too shopworn to fertilize.
Betans usually "turn off" menstruation at puberty, until needed for egg harvesting, but by age 76 even most Betans are probably naturally menopausal. (I have no idea what may be going on with the haut. Although the ba suggest they may be experimenting with the idea of abandoning sex altogether.)
Statement/Question: as the novel closed, it felt like a farewell not just to Cordelia and her story but to the Vorkosigan story itself. ... I do not long for this event, this ending, this coda, but has it happened?."
It's certainly possible. If not "the end" -- I've tried that before, and it hasn't stuck -- it's a resting point for now.
Ta, L.

So thank you.
A lot.
(In case anyone is actually curious, so for the insights have been: "I don't have to. Whatever you think goes in that blank space there, it doesn't. I Don't Have To." -- and "What you want may be delayed, but that doesn't mean you can't have it.")