Captain Vorpatril's Alliance

, #15

Kindle Edition, 432 pages

English language

Published Nov. 27, 2012 by Spectrum Literary Agency, Inc..

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (2 reviews)

When handsome Ivan Vorpatril reluctantly agrees to help Barrayar’s undercover security keep an eye on a young woman in danger, he is drawn into a tangled network of intrigue and unlikely romance. The job description did not include arrest warrants from the local police or being caught in the endless schemes of warring Houses from Jackson’s Whole. Returning to Barrayar with the young lady, both are faced with choices and challenges neither had expected.

7 editions

Review of Captain Vorpatril's Alliance (Vorkosigan Saga 15) by Lois McMaster Bujold

No rating

It's hardly the best of the Vorkosigan saga books, but it does have it's charm. Unfortunately it also is quite uneven, and the brisk pacing drops considerably during the second half of the book. Which is odd, as this should be just the time when it should pick up. The book is a screwball comedy in the science fiction setting of the Vorkosigan saga. Ivan Vorpatril, cousin to the series' main star Miles Vorkosigan and often recurring side character, is on a work trip to the planet of Komarr. There an agent from Imperial Security he knows recruits him as a bodyguard for a girl who might be in danger. After a complicated few days, with local authorities, interstellar criminals, and his boss on his back, he and his charges are backed into a corner and he comes up with a rather gallant but foolish proposal: marriage. Weirdly enough it …

Review of "Captain Vorpatril's Alliance" on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Returning to Bujold's Vorkosigan universe is like slipping on a favorite pair of jeans. You know all the characters, you know their back-stories, you know the settings, and you already love them all.

This novel was a pleasant variation, since it does NOT focus on Miles but his playboy cousin Ivan Vorpatril. Poor Ivan has always run dangerously close to being two-dimensional, particularly in comparison to his brilliant, driven, Lord Auditor cousin. This novel gives him both depth and history.

Not the greatest book in the series, but solid and satisfying.