![Image](http://www.libriumarcana.com/Uploads/Rogue/Pictures/Smileys/overkill.gif)
Fixed your spoiler tags. Thanks for playing the Game of Life. You win... nothing.
-Stofsk
I agree that it's getting to be the same ol' same ol', but I can't help but care about the characters. I :luv: the interactions between Honor and Mike and Alice and Tremain and Harkness and White Haven and Emily and Elizabeth and Nimitz and... well, just about everybody. And that's why I'll read the next book, and the one after that, and so on.Mayabird wrote:I can't get myself to care about the series anymore. I'm tired of the same ol' same ol' and the fall of the Solarian League from its own ponderous weight, Mesan corruption, and current restrictions on growth would be far more interesting. There'd still be plenty of opportunities for battle scenes as Manticore, Haven, and that German-analogue star empire fight for their survival against the desperate Solarian hordes.
*raises eyebrow* I must respectfully disagree with you about the interactions of the characters, then.fgalkin wrote:Meh. I always liked the space battles. The interactions between the characters got stale around book 4. And the less said about Nimitz or Honor's "marriage," the better.
Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
Know I admit that I haven't read any further than The Honor of the Queen but has there been some drastic developments in treecat's that allows them to get married? I thought they were just dolphins with legs. And wouldn't a marriage drastically interefere with Nimitz spacegoing ways?Lord Iames Osari wrote:>.<
NO.
Nimitz is married. Honor is married. Neither of them is married to the other. Although I suppose it could be argued that their bonding is, in a sense, similar.
Don't worry about it, I have no intention of reading further unless they get put up on the Baen Free Library.Lord Iames Osari wrote:Only to The Honor of the Gueen? Ok, so you wouldn't know about either of those developments, and I don't want to spoil it for you any further.
You mean aside from "the treecats are really as smart as humans, they just kept it hidden from humans, just because, until the Great and Mighty Honor Harrington comes along and revolutionized Human-treecat relations by developing a sign language that enables them to communicate with humans?"Lord Iames Osari wrote:*raises eyebrow* I must respectfully disagree with you about the interactions of the characters, then.fgalkin wrote:Meh. I always liked the space battles. The interactions between the characters got stale around book 4. And the less said about Nimitz or Honor's "marriage," the better.
Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
I must admit to being curious about your stance toward Nimitz and Honor's marriage, however.
Here.Comrade Kendall wrote:Don't worry about it, I have no intention of reading further unless they get put up on the Baen Free Library.
It doesn't strike me as odd, but that's only because I have long since categorized Honor Harrington as a fantasy object, not a character. This just means she's become sexual fantasy object as well. Sad.fgalkin wrote: You mean aside from "the treecats are really as smart as humans, they just kept it hidden from humans, just because, until the Great and Mighty Honor Harrington comes along and revolutionized Human-treecat relations by developing a sign language that enables them to communicate with humans?"
As for the marriage, she's entering into a polygamous marriage with her mentor and father figure (and no one objects). Does that not strike you as a bit...odd?
-fgalkin
No, its a sign that Weber sells well enough that the editors don't try to rock the boat. The Honor verse was always somewhat contrived, but Honor has slid from strong protagonist to Mary Sue to full blown fantasy object. Sad.frigidmagi wrote:You know that's one of the things that ruined the later series for me was this out of nowhere thing between her and White Haven. It literally just happens out of nowhere in Honor Among Enemies... Pretty much because White Haven saw her for the first time in a dress... WTF? It's things like this that let you know the editors have stopped paying attention to a writer I think.
I for one think that the treecats had a very good reason to conceal their true intelligence.fgalkin wrote:You mean aside from "the treecats are really as smart as humans, they just kept it hidden from humans, just because, until the Great and Mighty Honor Harrington comes along and revolutionized Human-treecat relations by developing a sign language that enables them to communicate with humans?"
Ok. Polygamous marriage. What's so wrong about it? The Bible is chock full of polygamy. All of the people involved (Honor, Hamish, Emily) are involved of their own free will, so I don't see where the problem lies with this.fgalkin wrote:As for the marriage, she's entering into a polygamous marriage with her mentor and father figure (and no one objects). Does that not strike you as a bit...odd?