Ancillary Sword

Ann Leckie
Ancillary Sword Cover

Tea and Indignation

couchtomoon
4/4/2015
Email

Ancillary Sword by Ann Leckie

Setting: Mostly on a space station belonging to the vast Radsch Empire, thousands of years in the future of the galactic human diaspora.

Summary: After the destruction of the ship Justice of Toren, the Lord of the Radsch gives Breq, the only survivingJustice of Toren ancillary soldier, command of a Mercy ship. She is assigned to Athoek Station, where institutionalized classism has led to the neglect and abuse of conquered citizens.

The blurb that was never blurbed:

Time for Breq-fast! (Because it was a long time between reading Justice and Sword. Get it? Ohnevermind.)

The premise-puncturing quote that everybody's thinking:

'I may well be extremely foolish just letting you live, let along giving you official authority and a ship...' [5]

Yep.

Synopsis quote:

...there were no tiny, brightly colored penises hanging in the corridors,... [18]

Haha, just kidding, but yeah... a funny scene in book full of "shes" and "hers." I think Leckie is digging at herself here.

How it feels: Television-in-a-novel, much like its predecessor. Less than subtle address of imperial classism. Lots of indignant dialogue of the Picard shirt-tugging variety, which upstages the much more interesting quirks of an "unplugged" AI protagonist. Much tea drinking.

Word count time: Tea is mentioned 74 times, up from 39 in Ancillary Justice.

The blurb that was never blurbed, part 2:

More tea with your Breq-fast? (Eh?... eh?)

But about that tea drinking: It is a worn out sensory detail that I am quick to condemn, but it does serve the character of this sprawling empire maintained by delicate diplomacy.

Should you read this: Meh. Dramatized sci-fi makes for a blasé read, but I genuinely look forward to seeing this on the small screen, where the indignant dialogue and overt social commentary will be best utilized. Non-gendered pronoun use among sexually-ambiguous humanoid characters is not the most nuanced form of social commentary - it should not blow away dedicated SF readers - but this will be good for mainstream 'Murica. I eagerly await the conservative huffing and puffing that will come from this development.

http://couchtomoon.wordpress.com