Borders of Infinity by Lois McMaster Bujold
My rating: 4 of 5 stars Three Strong Novellas, One Weak Frame Story The Borders of Infinity (1989) collects three novellas from Miles Vorkosigan's early days, connecting them via a framing 'story,' in which Miles is recovering from one of his many surgeries to repair/replace his brittle broken bones, this time in both his arms. Simon Illyan, chief of Barrayaran Imperial Security, visits Miles to get to the bottom of some dodgy accounting for some of Miles' covert operations with the Dendari Mercenaries, for a political enemy of Aral Vorkosigan would like to get at the great man through his son and is working to reveal Miles to be an embezzler of Imperial money. The three novellas, then, are supposedly Miles' explanations of unexplained cost overruns. The first novella is the painful, moving 'The Mountains of Mourning' (1989). Here 20-year-old Miles is a new ensign on leave after graduating from the Imperial Service Academy when he's assigned by his Count father to solve a case of infanticide and then to administer justice in a backwater hill village of his family district. No matter how difficult, Miles must do the right thing, for his district, for his empire, for his father--and for the dead baby. And it is a personal case because baby Raina's neck was broken for being a 'mutant' (whose 'mutation' was really only a treatable harelip), while Miles is viewed as a 'mutant' by too many Barrayarans (even his own grandfather tried to kill him when he was a baby). Miles finds his raison d'etre: 'Peace to you, small lady, he thought to Raina. You've won a twisted poor modern knight, to wear your favor on his sleeve. But it's a twisted poor world we were both born into, that rejects us without mercy and ejects us without consultation. At least I won't just tilt at windmills for you. I'll send in sappers to mine the twirling suckers, and blast them into the sky.' 'Labyrinth' (1989), the second novella, presents Miles at 23 in his alter-ego as Admiral Naismith, the leader of the Dendarii Mercenaries (covertly working for the Barrayaran Empire as Miles is really a Lieutenant in Imperial Security). The Dendarii have come to Jackson's Whole, the planet run by crime syndicate Houses (capitalism on steroids). The mission is simple: buy weapons from House Fell, pick up a geneticist defector from House Bharaputra, and quietly leave. Miles being Miles, things get complicated, involving House Ryoval (infamous for producing exotic sex slaves), a quaddie (four-armed) musician, a genetically engineered giant fanged super soldier (who's also a lonely, insecure 16-year-old girl), and Miles' own conflicting senses of chivalry and pragmatics and loyalties to his mercenaries and to his Emperor. Plenty of neat lines like 'God. He remembered sixteen. Sex-obsessed and dying inside every minute.' Plenty of compelling character development like Miles and Taura proving their humanity to each other. My only complaint is that Bujold does the hermaphrodite Dendari Captain Bel Thorne a disservice by--despite the neutral pronoun 'it' used to refer to Bel--making it male when attracted to a woman and female when attracted to a man rather than writing her as an ever exotic 'it' composed equally of both genders or partaking of neither. In the last novella, 'The Borders of Infinity' (1987), young Miles is still living his dual life as Barrayaran ImpSec Lieutenant and Dendarii Admiral Naismith when, in a rather too Captain Kirk-like way he has himself inserted alone into a hellish POW prison camp run by Cetagandans. His mission is to arrange the rescue of a war-hero human colonel, but the prison is inside a hermetically sealed and impermeable dome, the 10,214 prisoners are demoralized and disorganized, and immediately upon entry Miles is beaten and stripped naked by camp thugs. Now he must execute the mission with only his mind and charisma--and an imaginary hat to hide his privates with when dealing with female prisoners! This one is great up till the climax, which could use more cat and mouse between Miles and the Cetagandan wardens and less deus ex machina. The novella does have plenty of neat lines, like 'When you can see the color of the [imaginary hat's] feathers. . . . you'll also understand how you can expand your borders to infinity.' Audiobook reader Grover Gardner is his usual appealing, professional, Vorkosigan self here. Perfect. About that frame 'story' . . . it's unnecessary and contrived and skimpy. Nothing really happens in it apart from Miles supposedly telling Simon the three novellas (so as to explain the suspicious accounting) and talking a bit with his mother. I can't believe that formidable ImpSec head Simon wouldn't already have known the complete details by now. And in the first story Miles used his own graduation money instead of Empire funds, so it would seem to have no connection with the accounting business anyway. Furthermore, though Miles is supposedly telling Simon what happened in the three cases, the stories are narrated in the third person, albeit limited to his point of view, because that's how Bujold wrote them before, apparently, thinking to publish them together in this edition. Because the three stories are fine early Miles fare, I recommend them to fans of Bujold's series--but I wish she'd published them together without the frame. View all my reviews
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