What We're Reading

Book Reviews by the staff of the Mendocino County Library

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Guilty Pleasures—The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold




A world where the five gods toy with human lives to manifest their wishes. A country where the royal family is cursed with illness, infertility, and depravity. A palace full of danger, intrigue, and deadly power struggles. A strong-willed princess in need of an advisor clever enough to teach and protect her. A man beaten and broken by betrayal and years of galley slavery. Put them all together, give them to Lois McMaster Bujold, and she’ll spin a splendid yarn.

Caz, after years at the oars, wanted nothing more than three warm meals a day, a dry place to sleep, and a quiet position in the kitchen or stables of his former patroness. How could that simple desire turn into a nightmare of danger and deceit under the eyes of his former betrayers? Every event in Caz’s life leads him inexorably toward his position as secretary, tutor, and later ambassador for the princess of the medieval kingdom of Chalion. Bujold wastes no characters, scenes or details, and as the story unfolds, you’ll begin to see just how each event and character—the betrayal and the galleys, a gold coin, and a suborned soldier, for example—play an important part in this hero’s journey.

So many good books, so little time, and yet I find myself rereading Bujold’s books, both her Chalion series and her science fiction Vorkosigan series. What do I like about her books? Her smart, honorable characters, clever dialogue, subtle (and not so subtle) humor, excellent plot development, and inventive, meticulously drawn worlds. Her books are just plain fun to read.

Bujold, no slouch in the SF world, has won five Hugos, three Nebulas, and two Locus Awards for her science fiction novels and short stories. The Curse of Chalion won the SF Site’s Reader's Choice, Best Books of 2001 award and was a nominee for the Hugo Award for Best Novel of 2002. It also won the Mythopoeic Award 2002 for Adult Literature and was nominated for the 2002 World Fantasy Award for Best Novel.

If you prefer sci-fi to fantasy, try the first book in the Miles Vorkosigan series: The Warrior’s Apprentice. You will not be disappointed with either series.
Reviewed by Anne Shirako, Reference Librarian, Ukiah Branch, Mendocino County Library, 463-4493

Originally published in the Ukiah Daily Journal, 01/17/2013. Reprinted by permission 


1 Comments:

Blogger KLK said...

I'm re-reading Chalion too this week, for at least the dozenth time. Lois McMaster Bujold is one of those rare authors who never get boring, no matter how often you reread it.

7:03 PM  

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