68. Lois McMaster Bujold, Borders of Infinity -- so, this is the book which is, essentially, a collection of the three Miles Vorkosigan novellas ("The Mountains of Mourning", "Labyrinth", and "The Borders of Infinity"), tied together by a sort of framing story where Miles recalls or tells Illyan about these three events. (
I liked the last one best )
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Seriously! I couldn't care less if they got their happy little threesome!
I'd spoiled myself for Diarmuid's death, which was probably a good thing, 'cos back before I found out he died in the end, I'd been hoping for Aileron to snuff it so Diar and Sharra could be king and queen. (And, yeah, I'd have really liked to hear more about Sharra, too, whom I also rather liked as a character.)
Very emphatically agreed with you on Fionavar reading like a Tolkien pastiche + random Arthuriana, which was a little embarrassing even.
I read GGK clear out of order, starting with The Lions of Al-Rassan (which I think is his best, but I'm afraid to reread it now, as it seems I like each subsequent GGK book I read a little less, and this appears to be a fairly common trajectory... :P), then The Sarantine Mosaic, which I thought was quite good, then A Song for Arbonne, which I thought was a good effort but significantly flawed in ways that hadn't ( ... )
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Barrayar is actually the second half of the prequel to the Miles books (well, it's not really a prequel since it was written first... but it takes place earlier than they, at any rate) and, if memory serves, The Vor Game takes off pretty much right after "The Mountains of Mourning". Now, if only you could get ahold of The Warrior's Apprentice, the first Miles book, you would have the beginning of the story all patched up :)
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This is sort of a backwards way of going about it, but maybe it's another option to look into: the various individual Vorkosiverse books have been collected into bundled editions. Thus, there's Young Miles, which includes The Warrior's Apprentice and also The Vor Game and "The Mountains of Mourning". You don't need the latter two, since you've read one and have the other on hold, but if your local library has the omnibus edition, that might be one way to get your hands on the former.
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