lotesse: (curioser)
throbbing light machine ([personal profile] lotesse) wrote2014-10-16 08:43 pm
Entry tags:

tied him to a tree like saint sebastian

two questions about the Vorkosigan Saga:

1. how does swearing someone work in terms of the armsmans' score/Vorloupulous' law? When Miles swears Arde and Baz in - when Mark swears Elena - do those count as additions to the number of Vorkosigan Armsmen? Because neither boy acts as though a slot needs to be open before a swearing can happen, on penalty of high treason. Is there a textual explanation, or is it a crack in the narrative?

2. Why, when Bujold so obviously understands why aspects of Miles' courtship of Ekaterin are really borderline in terms of acceptable behavior, does she choose to have the story go down that way? There are all of these words about how Ekaterin needs some time, some confidence, some space - Bujold clearly does get it, at some level. Does she just not care? Why was it necessary for her to write the story about Miles pushing Ekaterin's consent and disrespecting her boundaries and still getting her to marry him in the end?

It would have been really cool if it had gone the other way, actually been a healthy and functional romance all the time, instead of just some of the time.
ithiliana: (Default)

[personal profile] ithiliana 2014-10-17 03:07 am (UTC)(link)
Early Sayers is less interesting than later Sayers -- I love later Sayers, and even most of her earlier stuff (with a couple of exceptions). the later Sayers has Harriet Vane (and Gaudy Night is one of two books I took--along with Virginia Woolf's ROOM--when I did a study abroad term at oxford), and I love Harriet Vane (who writes murder mysteries). (Tolkien disliked Sayers' work immensely!)