FallingFreebyLoisMcMasterBujold

by Candy Friday, October 06, 2006 at 04:07 PM
Our Grade:
B-
Title: Falling Free
Author: Lois McMaster Bujold
Publication Info: Baen 1999, ISBN: 067157812X
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy

I’ve heard a lot about Lois McMaster Bujold. I mean, one of my best friends wrote about Cordelia Naismith Vorkosigan for his college entry essay--and he got in. Bujold inspires a lot of hard-core love among the geeks, and I’ve been meaning to check out her Vorkosigan saga for several years now.

Falling Free is set in the Vorkosigan universe, though it takes place about 200 years before Miles is born and its events are only tangentially related to the greater Vorkosigan saga. Regardless, I was pretty excited about digging into it, because I thought the premise teemed with all sorts of possibilities for drama and adventure. To wit: What if a massive conglomerate with interplanetary interests commisioned biologists to genetically engineer a species of human maximized for life in freefall? What if this species was considered corporate property and not strictly human? And to drive the ethical considerations to the fore, what would happen if, for some reason, these engineered humans became completely obsolete?

Unfortunately, though the questions this book raised were enough to make me tingle from anticipation, the execution was disappointingly slight. Falling Free is entertaining, but between lack of proper character development, minimal time spent on the thorny philosophical and ethical issues and having the actual adventure start more than halfway through the book (not to mention ending the story just as it got really interesting), the book doesn’t qualify as anything more than a slightly-better-than-mediocre experience.

More,more,more!>
Picture of {name}
22 comments1 trackback Bookmark to del.icio.us Add to Technorati favorites Digg this post on digg.com RSS
Categories: Non-Romance Reviews: SF/FReviews by Author, A-CReviews by Grade: B

Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.

Comments

Picture of Berni Berni said on...
10.06.06 at 04:47 PM |

That is one of Bujold’s weakest books, I think.  You should start with the first two real Vorkosigan books, which are available together as CORDELIA’S HONOR.  (Individually they’re SHARDS OF HONOR, where she first meets the man she’s going to marry, and BARRAYAR, about her very stressful pregnancy with Miles—stressful because of Barrayaran politics.) These are wonderful.  I love Cordelia and was sorry Bujold didn’t write more specifically about her.

Ditto, if you read Bujold’s fantasy, skip her first fantasy, THE SPIRIT RING and read her Chalion universe series instead.

Picture of dl dl said on...
10.06.06 at 05:21 PM |

Ditto Bernie.  Shards of Honor excellent, and her Miles adventures are mostly good.  Hated Spirit Ring, very disturbing.

Picture of D.S. D.S. said on...
10.06.06 at 05:41 PM |

For an extra thrill listen to the unabridged audiobook Curse of Chalion read by Lloyd James.  In the beginning his voice is diffident in a Jimmy Stewart sort of way, but sexy.  It gains in confidence as the story progresses but is still very low key and attractive.

Picture of Megan Megan said on...
10.06.06 at 07:19 PM |

I feel compelled to defend The Spirit Ring (mainly because I thought it got a bad rap when it came out, presumably because it was Something Different).  It’s not as strong as Bujold’s Chalion books, but it’s as strong as the science fiction she was writing in the early 90s.  Later Bujold is generally better than Earlier Bujold...which is nice, because it bodes well for the Next Bujold.

Picture of Jennifer Jennifer said on...
10.06.06 at 07:23 PM |

Yeah, Falling Free, and Ethan of Athos, (also in the same universe, features a planet that only has men on it and the doctor sent off to look for eggs) are pretty weak compared to the Vorkosigan books. Just skip to Cordelia and Miles and you’ll be happy.

I never got into the Chalion series. It seems to be one of those books where I pick it up and can’t even get a toehold on what the world is like and how it relates to our reality, so I gave up.

Picture of L.B. L.B. said on...
10.06.06 at 07:29 PM |

Ms. Bujold is one of my favourite authors of all time in any genre, and like others on this list I read widely. Her strength is in her characterization, and my favourite character is definitely Miles Vorkosigan. He is one of the most fascinating, strong, intelligent, needy, and flawed fictional characters I’ve ever encountered. (I’d recommend starting with the “Warrior’s Apprentice”, which introduces Miles. I also enjoyed Shards of Honour, which is about Mile’s parents.) This is how all characters should be drawn. Simply brilliant.

That said, on the (thankfully infrequent) occasion when Ms. Bujold seemed compelled to write about stock characters… well, the less said the better.

Thanks! I’m going to go re-read some of her books now.

Picture of jmc jmc said on...
10.07.06 at 04:03 AM |

I’ll join the chorus, and agree that Falling Free is one of Bujold’s weaker offerings, along with Ethan of Athos and Diplomatic Immunity.

I love Shards of Honor, the duology of first real Vorkosigan books.  But the book that I’ve pimped to everyone I know—The Curse of Chalion.  It’s one of my favorite books :) [I feel like such a fan-girl typing that.]

Picture of Katie Katie said on...
10.07.06 at 06:37 AM |

I would definitely start with Cordelia’s Honor (because if you get Shards of Honor, you have to wait until you can get Barrayar, and you won’t want to).

I’ll second that Ethan of Athos can definitely be skipped.

Picture of Sisuile Sisuile said on...
10.07.06 at 07:07 AM |

Hey, I liked Ethan of Athose and Falling Free...but...they really are two of her weaker offerings and must be read after you’ve gotten through some of Miles and Cordilia. It’s like she assumes, rightly or wrongly, that the reader of those two is not using them as an introduction to the universe and have some clues about the world that she’s already built. So if you’re coming in with those as the first offerings, you’ll get lost and frustrated because of the underlying assumption that you know what she’s talking about.

Grabing Cordelia’s Honor should help clear some things up.

Picture of Candy Candy said on...
10.07.06 at 10:04 AM |

Everyone: Thanks for the recommendations. I’ll be borrowing a friend’s copy of Shards of Honor some time soon, and y’all will find out what I think of it when i’m done with it.

Sisuile: It’s not that I felt lost or frustrated, I was just kind of bored.

Picture of C. Diane C. Diane said on...
10.07.06 at 11:11 AM |

Gotta concur with everyone else.  Falling Free is weak.  I’ve read the whole Vorkosigan series a couple of times, but never re-read FF.  I liked Ethan, but I’m a big Elli Quinn fan, and she’s a major player in that story. (I also like Ivan, and I’m glad the Author Had a Better Idea on his characterization.)

My top 3 (so hard!) are Memory, the Vor Game, and the Mountains of Mourning (really a novella.) I liked the short in Irresistible Forces (and of the other 5 stories in it, I liked 1, hated 2 and was ambivalent on 2.)

Picture of Karla Karla said on...
10.07.06 at 11:56 AM |

Candy I’m glad to see you’ll give Shards of Honor a try because it really is good - although Warrior’s Apprentice is way more fun for my money.  Although Civil Campaign reminds me of Oscar Wilde and oh heck I just really like the whole series, but Ethan and Falling Free are without question the weakest offerings.

Picture of Marianne McA Marianne McA said on...
10.08.06 at 07:52 AM |

I’ve just finished a major Vorkosigan reread, and I do love the series. While I’d start with Shards of Honour, just for completeness, I don’t think it’s that great a book. Not much complex world building. [I’m not even sure I saw why the hero and heroine were attracted to each other - certainly what Cordelia theorises, much later in the series, about where his attraction to her stemmed from, wasn’t something I’d picked up on from that book. Barrayar is better, but my heart lies with the books about Miles. I haven’t read Falling Free, but the Crazy Plan part sounded like most of the Miles books - he spends a lot of time scrambling for solutions.
My favourites from the series would be the later books - Memory, Komarr and A Civil Campaign (which is a more-or-less a sci-fi Regency. Fantastic book.).
If you weren’t going to read the series, and just wanted to read one book to get a feel for Bujold, I’d plump for Memory.
Worth mentioning that, if you’re buying them, most of the books have been bundled into omnibus editions, which for me were both easier to find and cheaper than buying an individual book. [Though annoyingly, I didn’t realise that at first, which meant I ended up with duplicates. Gaaah!}
As Berni mentioned, Shards of Honour and Barrayar are published together as Cordelia’s Honour, and - from memory - I think the next couple of books are published together as ‘Young Miles’.

Picture of C. Diane C. Diane said on...
10.08.06 at 05:37 PM |

As much as Memory is my favorite book, I *really* think it’s a bad place to start.  So much of it relies on knowing Simon, Alys, and Miles’ past exploits with the Dendarii.  Having that background, I think, is essential to knowing why the major plot point is so important.

I’d start with one of the Miles books.  Cetaganda’s a fun one.  Many of my friends recommend the Warrior’s Apprentice as a starting point.

Picture of Marianne McA Marianne McA said on...
10.09.06 at 02:27 AM |

Actually, I wondered that after I posted, so I took Memory off the shelf to have a look at whether it’s unreadable by itself, and ended up reading the whole thing yet again.

Bujold is quite good at backstory - I originally read the series out of order, and the books read well even out of sequence, though I agree with you that it’s better to read them in order.

Cetaganda’s not a favourite of mine -the dynamics of Cetaganda’s internal political structure still escape me: perhaps the Warrior’s Apprentice is the best starting point (though the writing is tighter later in the series, and I want Candy to Like The Next One.)

Has anyone read an early copy of Bujold’s new book? [I have it in my head it’s called The Sharing Knife, but that sounds very like a Philip Pullman title, so perhaps I’m misremembering.]

Picture of C. Diane C. Diane said on...
10.09.06 at 06:29 AM |

It’s dangerous, picking one up!  I was looking for 2 specific scenes in Memory a month or so ago, and it was so hard not to read the whole thing. (I have a quote from it as my email .sig: “Money, power, sex ... and elephants.")

I think it stands alone well enough - she does give good backstory - but IMO it just hits harder? if you know and are invested in the characters.

I haven’t read any excerpts from the Sharing Knife yet, but http://www.harpercollins.ca/global_scripts/product_catalog/book_xml.asp?isbn=0061137588&tc=cx has the first 2 chapters.

Picture of Lucy-S Lucy-S said on...
10.15.06 at 08:12 AM |

This book was a pleasant enough diversion, but it’s surely not one of Bujold’s best.  Ditto the suggestions Berni made.

Picture of Jennifjord Jennifjord said on...
10.21.06 at 08:03 PM |

I had the same reaction to Falling Free, which I read early on in my Bujold glom. And now in comparison to the sheer brilliance of Mountains of Mourning, Mirror Dance, Memory, and Paladin of Souls, it looks even worse. So I’ll second what everyone else said, stick with the books and I really, really hope you love Miles and company.

I’m waiting not very patiently for The Sharing Knife Part One to get to my library. I’m hoping to get it next week.

Picture of Doug Hoffman Doug Hoffman said on...
10.22.06 at 03:44 PM |

Another vote for Shards, Candy. Great balance of action, SF, and romance.

Swallowing contest at my place, btw.

Picture of badgerbag badgerbag said on...
12.05.06 at 12:51 AM |

Falling Free is the boringest one. Start with Shards of Honor! Then just plow through them and the goodness builds up like a soap opera. Then when you hit Mirror Dance and Memory you’ll be blown away. In many ways Cetaganda is the coolest book with the most subversive feminist message. & then if you are still with me, you’ll get to Civil Campaign and the romance novel goodness kicks in, though again, very subversively.  It’s because Miles is such a dillweed, and you have to like him anyway, but it becomes clear he’s an unreliable narrator. 

Taken together they are all very cool.  I’m crazy about Paladin of Souls too, another especially romance-novelly one.

Picture of Shweta Shweta said on...
01.06.07 at 02:25 AM |

I just composed an entire email before realizing there were comments… and I was saying basically what everyone else here is:  Falling Free/Ethan/Spirit Ring are relatively weak.  Silly me.

Annnnyway, I agree with Candy that Falling Free is boring more than confusing. 

I do love Cordelia’s Honor, and vehemently second its recommendation. Ditto all the Chalion books.
While I love Miles, upon rereading The Warrior’s Apparentice I was struck by how very immature he starts off.  This immaturity put one of my friends off the Miles books entirely, and so now I hesitate to recommend it as a starting point.

Picture of Kay Kay said on...
04.26.07 at 08:51 AM |

No one’s mentioned yet why Falling Free, Ethan of Athos, and Spirit Ring are the least of Bujold’s works:  they’re all from very early in her career (21, 20, and 15 years ago).  The Vorkosigan saga was written in approximate chronological order, and her growth as a writer is evident.

I love Shards of Honor primarily for the characters and humor in it; the writing, noticeably better than in FF, is not yet up to the level of mastery I’ve come to admire so much in her books.  [The one scene of violent, twisted sexuality made me hesitate to recommend it to my young niece, but it’s untypical, and absolutely essential to the series.  Besides, she probably hardly noticed!]

I recommend Borders of Infinity for readers considering whether to take the plunge into the Vorkosiverse.  Comprising a frame story wrapped around 3 novellas detailing crucial points in Miles’ development/adventures, it’s a good, short intro to the characters and the world, without spoiling any of the other books.  The first of the novellas, the Mountains of Mourning, is possibly the very best short story I’ve ever read, both as story and technically.  It’s available free online at http://www.baen.com/library/1011250002/1011250002.htm .  Lots more info available at http://www.dendarii.com .

A careful second reading of The Curse of Chalion revealed unobtrusive, incredible artistry used in service of the story, and convinced me to change my policy of not re-reading (because “so many books, so little time!").  I think once we get the second Sharing Knife book, I’m going to love it almost as much!

Hoping you’ll try more Bujold,
Kay (I wanna be Cordelia when I grow up) B.

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please enter the word you see in the image below: