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The Mountains Of Mourning (2000)

by Lois McMaster Bujold(Favorite Author)
4.26 of 5 Votes: 2
ISBN
1590623819 (ISBN13: 9781590623817)
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English
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publisher
Fictionwise.com
review 1: "The Mountains of Mourning" is yet another Miles Vorkosigan novella or story by Lois McMaster Bujold. I thought I wasn't going to like it but it turned out pretty good. It's a murder mystery.The Story: Miles Vorkosigan has a few days for leave and he has plans but his father, the Count Vorkosigan, has plans for Miles. There is a murder in the mountain areas of the Count's estate and he sends Miles to find out what happened and to carry out any punishment as necessary. The problem is that the hill dwellers are old fashioned and kill any infant who has any birth defects. This is a old custom the Count wants to stop so Miles goes to find out who committed this crime.The writing is subtle. I liked that the story went into directions I was not expecting and the author's solutio... moren and ending of the story was very good. It fit with what the hill people expected as justice and not what I would expect as justice. Very good.I don't think I'd read it again. Maybe, but it was worth reading the first time.
review 2: This short story comes in an anthology with two others, set later in the series (after books I hadn't yet read when I read this one). Bujold's written a sort of framing device for them which, unfortunately, is also set chronologically later. I kind of ignored it, and stuck to the short story itself.The Mountains of Mourning is set 3 years after the action in The Warrior's Apprentice. At the end of that book, Miles succeeded in gaining entrance to the Barrayaran Imperial Service academy (in fact, we got a really neat scene right at the end showing just how well he was going to do there). He's now graduated and is looking forward to spending a nice holiday at Vorkosigan Surleau, in the family's summer residence.On the very first day, though, his plans have to change. Coming back to the house he encounters a clearly exhausted, desperate young woman who refuses to go away until she can see someone to demand justice. Miles discovers she has walked all the way from a distant village, and assists her in seeing his father, Count Vorkosigan. He thinks that's his work done and Aral will just make sure she can see the District Magistrate, but his father has other ideas. It turns out the crime the young woman, Harra, is so desperate to report is the murder of her newborn daughter. She had been born with what Miles knows is a cleft palate, but the villagers call "cat's mouth". It's an easily repairable birth defect, but Barrayarans have long been terrified of mutations. Traditionally, mutants have been killed at birth. Aral Vorkosigan, intent on modernising Barrayar, has had his government ban the practice, but old traditions die slowly out in the middle of nowhere. Harra is convinced her husband had their little daughter killed, very much against her will. She wants justice, but the Village Speaker, who is supposed to dispense justice, won't even accept there's a case. The entire village have been putting immense pressure on Harra to just accept it was a natural death and leave it at that. She won't.Instead of sending Harra to the District Magistrate, Aral decides Miles will go back to the village with Harra to investigate the murder. His role will be to represent his, Aral's, voice, but also to provide a clear visual message. Because the Barrayaran attitude towards mutants is one that Miles, with his physical issues, has experienced himself (even if he keeps reminding people his physical aspect was caused by teratogenic harm, not a mutation!).It's a melancholy story with a very neat plot, and I thought it was very good. It's structured a bit as a classic Golden Age mystery, with its closed number of potential suspects and an investigator with the power to do the classic Hercule Poirot reveal, but Harra's pain about her daughter prevents it from really being a cosy mystery. It's sad, but the ending is hopeful.Miles is quite interesting here. I'm writing this after reading the next story, and he feels more mature here, possibly because of the sombre nature of what's going on around him. The story provides some insight into his character by increasing our understanding of the attitudes he would have faced growing up, even insulated by his father's position. We knew some of it already (witness his grandfather's reactions in the previous books, for instance), but this brings it home even more.A good entry in the series.MY GRADE: A B+. less
Reviews (see all)
Madalex
Adding to general comments, I think it's the saddest story ever written.
estherfishheads
Very insightful look into Miles' motivations...beautiful short story
Dudu
Miles goes to investigate a murder.Nobody wins.
BloomingPit
That was really good. I didn't want it to end.
moonie6271
Re-read, 8/14.
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