Honor Harrington – La Maison d’acier

Coucou mes p’tites patates honorables! J’ai récemment fais un saut chez Mollat pour y trouver ce premier tome du guide de l’univers centré sur ce que l’on nomme le honoverse. David Weber a en effet écrit une bonne vingtaine de bouquins autour de son héroïne, Honor Harrington, et d’autres auteurs en ont également ajouté, pour créer finalement un vaste et complexe univers de sf, particulièrement riche et flamboyant. Très clairement, le cycle d’Honor Harrington nous immerge dans une ambiance guerrière et politicienne, où les anciennes nations européennes ayant combattuent en pleine mer sont ici des forces contrôlant des systèmes stellaires entiers. En guise de poudre à canon, ce sont les lasers qui taillent dans les coques et les champs de force.

Et donc, l’auteur, en collaboration avec ses fans, ceux de la communauté BuNine en tout cas, a décidé de sortir une encyclopédie sur son honorverse. Oui, rien que ça! J’avais déjà fais un article sur Mission Basilic, qui nous introduisait dans les aventures de cette héroïne atypique, j’avais également mentionné quelques mots sur Une guerre victorieuse et brève, mais là avec cette Maison d’acier, nous avons autre chose qu’un roman donc. Plus de 600 pages se consacrant à deux des grands empires des bouquins, celui de Manticore, et celui de Grayson, en se focalisant sur… Tout. La moindre donnée est ici utilisée pour enrichir et approfondir l’Histoire, les données astrographiques, la politique et les forces militaires de ces géants. Un travail ahurissant, mais pratiquement une journée ordinaire de boulot pour les passionnés de BuNine, à qui David Weber rend un vibrant hommage. La démarche me fait penser au Codex de Riva, du couple David et Leigh Eddings, mais en bien plus ambitieux, et surtout en bien plus riche.

Bon évidemment, ce tome un de l’encyclopédie est réservé à ceux et celles qui ont déjà entamé le cycle Honor Harrington, ou alors aux lecteurs et lectrices hardcore, ceux et celles qui lisent sans rétro-éclairage et qui cornent les pages de leur bouquin! Je ne peux d’ailleurs que vous encourager à vous y mettre, car au-delà de l’aspect militaire des histoires, les intrigues politiques sont nombreuses, tout comme les personnages que nous voyons évoluer, et parfois mourir également. Le travail de recherche est impressionnant, et fera sans doute grimacer celles et ceux qui n’apprécient pas les cycles longs. Je précise toutefois que cette encylopédie est très bien organisée, il est donc possible de s’y référer en lisant les différents tomes du cycle, qui d’ailleurs peuvent êtres lu par paires ou par trios.

Par contre pour les rôlistes, et dans une moindre mesure pour les figurinistes, cette Maison d’acier n’est que du bonheur, bonheur martial, mais bonheur tout de même! Il y a tout pour faire jouer dans l’honorverse, ce qui ne se fait étrangement pas couramment, alors que nous avons là un superbe cycle de space opera « sérieux ». Niveaux technologiques, projets militaires, intrigues politiques, tout est là pour lancer d’incroyables campagnes à travers cette vaste galaxie pleine de dangers!

Deux autres tomes sont prévus pour compléter l’encyclopédie de l’honorverse, la Maison des mensonges, et la Maison des ombres, voilà encore de bonnes raisons pour coiffer son tricorne, monter sur la passerelle de son croiseur lourd et ordonner le tir de quelques salves de lasers!

#honorverse #scienceFiction

I'm back to the #Honorverse with #HonorAmongEnemies the next book in the series and it feels like a bridge to better things, which I hope is true because this is the first time I've said, 'meh' when reading these books
https://www.tumblr.com/litcityblues/745017580131106816/honor-among-enemies-a-review?source=share
'Honor Among Enemies' --A Review

I’m back on the Honor Harrington train for 2024 with Honor Among Enemies and this time, Honor is being recalled back to active duty with the Royal Manticoran Navy– only this time, there’s a little bi…

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Finished: The Honor of the Queen
About to start The Short Victorious War

First, some thoughts about Honor. Included below: discussion of religion in SFF. No great spoilers.

I found this a better book than On Basilisk Station. It's a wild ride, and war is hell. I still have trouble keeping up with characters, but Captain Honor Harrington herself is better developed and a much stronger character in this one.

By "still have trouble keeping up with characters", here's an example. There's a major supporting character early in this second book about whom I kept asking myself, "Is this the same character as one of the villainous figures from the last book?" I've now finished the book and I think the answer is "no", but I'm still not quite sure. That's a failure on the part of the writer. I trust he will get better at this.

One other observation.

I am pretty sure the author, David Weber, is himself nonreligious.
Why do I say this?
A major part of the plot of Honor is conflict among Her Majesty's Navy and two planets founded by religious extremists. This includes conflict between the two planets. At various times, one side or another has to give in to what seem to be unreasonable stances from another party, all based on differences in ideology. (The planets have differences among themselves but share a common heritage. The Navy brings a different approach from either.)

When compromises happens, the Navy grins and bears it. Naval characters complain, but accept the necessity for the moment. The various locals, however, complain with phrases like "this goes against everything I believe!"

Come on. Any real religion, especially one capable of shaping an entire society, is about more than one thing. When a religious person makes what seems to be a compromise in one area, that rarely "goes against everything they believe". It probably goes against one thing they believe, and it may be a major thing, but our power to rationalize is nearly infinite. And the thing the locals are compromising on, well, it's an important part of their identity, but I can't see how it's their whole identity. They can find ways to make this work. They don't have to despair that they're giving up their whole identity.

This is a sloppy way of writing about religion, in stereotype, not as a social or spiritual reality.

To Weber's credit, he gives us some local figures who have their misgivings but work through them with time. Those characters are much more full and believable.

I am again grateful for the normal characterization of religion in James SA Corey's The Expanse series. Several characters are religious to various degrees, and it's just a normal thing. There's a Methodist pastor; there are Mormons in Space; and while that might seem weird to some, it's tremendously realistic and refreshing, as so many SF writers assume that religion is something humanity will magically "get over" in a few years. We aren't like that. Humanity will always be religious. That's part of who we are; it always has been and though the forms change over time, the reality does not.

#sf #sff #milSF #honorverse #honorHarrington #reading #davidWeber #theExpanse #jamesSACorey #religion

Finished: On Basilisk Station
Starting : The Honor of the Queen
#reading #books #sff #sciFi #honorVerse
Sci-Fi 5: On Basilisk Station – April 1, 1993
Sci-Fi 5 sits on your shoulder like a treecat to recount how readers met #HonorHarrington in David Weber's "On Basilisk Station." The military adventure storylines fused with political drama spawned a series of follow-up novels, spinoffs and short stories. https://sci-fi-5.libsyn.com/on-basilisk-station-april-1-1993 #honorverse #Podcast #SciFi5
Sci-Fi 5: On Basilisk Station - April 1, 1993

On April 1, 1993 science fiction readers were introduced to Commander Honor Harrington in David Weber's "On Basilisk Station." The military adventure storylines fused with political drama spawned a series of follow-up novels, spin-offs and short stories. Find out what's next for Harrington and our love of six-legged treecats in today's Sci-Fi 5. for your daily dose of science-fiction history.

@Scott & i were chatting anout really long #sciencefiction #book series. He claimed there weren’t many longer than Weber’s #Honorverse, which is at what, 25 books? Ha! I said, pTerry’s #Discworld was up to 41 novels. He then moved the goal posts & said ‘yeah, now let’s measure by *weight*’
Yay, more #honorverse novels. I just finished To End in Fire last night. What an ending. Now I’ve learned that two prequel novels just came out this past tuesday. I guess the new #Mistborn novel will have to wait a little bit longer. I must get to these first.

Okay folks, help me out! See the bracket below? We are voting for the upper right four options.

You can access the poll by clicking my profile and then the pinned toot. Or you can access it via this link (if you're already on Mastodon.Social): https://mastodon.social/@tuckerteague/109462626719773768

WHICH OF THESE FOUR IS THE BEST (IYHO)??
#ZonesOfThought by #VernorVinge

#Honorverse by #DavidWeber

#Foundation by #IsaacAsimov

#KnownSpace (includ. #ManKzinWars) by #LarryNiven

#SpaceOpera #ScienceFiction #scifi

Time now for the THIRD #ScienceFiction #SpaceOpera series #poll

VOTE BELOW!!

Poll One: https://mastodon.social/@tuckerteague/109379340476225064
Poll Two: https://mastodon.social/@tuckerteague/109419498380717272

WHICH OF THESE FOUR IS THE BEST (IYHO)??
#ZonesOfThought by #VernorVinge

#Honorverse by #DavidWeber

#Foundation by #IsaacAsimov

#KnownSpace (includ. #ManKzinWars) by #LarryNiven

BOOST THIS! Add your comments too!

NOTE: If you are on another instance than mine & have trouble voting, search for my name/address, find the poll and try voting.

Zones of Thought
16.7%
Honorverse
6.3%
Foundation
66.7%
Known Space
10.4%
Poll ended at .
@bookstodon @bookstodon #Honorverse #RingofFire Most recent additions to the teetering TBR pile include 3 of the most recent books in Eric Flint's 1632 series and the 4th and last novel co-authored by Flint and David Weber in the Crown of Slaves series.