Marque and Reprisal
Marque and Reprisal book cover

Marque and Reprisal

Hardcover – September 28, 2004

Price
$14.33
Format
Hardcover
Pages
336
Publisher
Del Rey
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345447586
Dimensions
6.25 x 1.25 x 9.25 inches
Weight
1.25 pounds

Description

Marque and Reprisal is Nebula Award winner Elizabeth Moon's second novel about Kylara Vatta, starship captain in her family's interstellar shipping business. Fresh from war, Ky is trying to resume a normal trading schedule when an unknown enemy attacks her prestigous family. Though her family is large, Ky may be its only surviving member. But she cannot confirm this, for sabotage has cut off communications between star systems. And Ky has other problems. She's been turned into a privateer against her will. Her family's mysterious foe knows where she is, and is trying to kill her. And she has a bloody secret of her own. Packed with action and intrigue, Marque and Reprisal and its prequel, Trading in Danger , are as strong and interesting as Elizabeth Moon's popular Serrano Legacy series, which also successfully combines hard SF, military SF, and adventure SF with interstellar and familial politics. The Kylara Vatta novels will please fans of the Serrano Legacy, Lois McMaster Bujold's Miles Vorkosigan saga, David Weber's Honor Harrington series, and Robert A. Heinlein's juvenile novels. --Cynthia Ward From Publishers Weekly After her debut in Moon's somewhat lackluster Trading in Danger (2003), capable young Kylara Vatta, now captain of a dilapidated space freighter, lets loose in this rip-roaring sequel. With most of her immediate family back home on Slotter Key blown to smithereens in a dastardly sneak attack and communication lines down, Ky must first find out who's responsible—then kill the villains out to drain Vatta blood. But this military SF tale is no mere shoot-'em-up. Ky thinks as well as she fights, coolly weighing commercial alternatives and handily using such human resources as her undercover operative cousin Stella and precocious teenager Toby Vatta, as well as the hard-currency diamonds that arrived with Stella in Aunt Gracie's legendary fruitcake. Though mildly tempted, Ky also sees through fetching chick-magnet Rafe (he of many aliases), son of the top of InterStellar Communication's command and now a covert agent with his own complex agenda. The charm lies in Moon's deft characterizations, especially the exorcism of Ky's guilt over her family's deaths. There's plenty of shipboard and dockside action, plus authentically grungy space-station settings. Former Marine Moon has a genuine hoorah series going for her. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From School Library Journal Adult/High School–This swashbuckler continues the saga of a family's interstellar trading empire. Though the story stands on its own, it begins where Trading in Danger (Del Rey, 2004) ends, with young Ky Vatta preparing to complete her assignment. Meanwhile, back on her home planet of Slotter's Key, the Vatta Transport Ltd. headquarters is being attacked and most of her family is dying. As the only remaining Vatta with any military training, Ky becomes her clan's best hope for survival. A letter of marque arrives from Slotter's Key, giving her the legal status of privateer, but her small merchant vessel is antiquated and unarmed, and her entrepreneurial and military talents are once more put to the test. She is joined by a cousin, a secret intelligence agent whose cover is a bad reputation; a teenage nephew who is the sole survivor of an attack on a Vatta ship; and their new partner, a charming trickster with many talents and secrets. Ky sets an ambitious agenda, vowing to find any surviving family members, regroup and save their business empire, identify the enemy, and achieve revenge. She and her crew are both ingenious and courageous as they save their world. The winning heroine struggles with her conscience (she likes fighting more than her culture approves) but never loses her sense of humor. The universe of the Vattas is freshly imagined and abundant in believable detail and exotic possibility. Successfully combining several science fiction subgenres, thistitle will delight many types of readers. –Christine C. Menefee, Fairfax County Public Library, VA Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist Kylara Vatta is back, and in this fine space adventure demonstrates Moon's knack for putting her characters up to their sternsheets in alligators. She and a motley crew are heading for home when she learns she has no home. Terrorists have attacked the Vatta estate, and the planetary government isn't prepared to help. With very little but her wits and a few new recruits--her madcap cousin Stella, an ex-marine, and an adventurer named Rafe who is clearly worthy to drink with Han Solo--Ky keeps herself alive. With the help of a letter of marque and reprisal, which allows her to take prizes, she tracks down the perpetrator and bests him in a terrifying zero-g duel. A third novel about Ky seems virtually inevitable and should be highly welcomed by those who have reveled in the first two. Gifted fantasist Moon is clearly beginning to rival Lois McMaster Bujold at space operatics. Roland Green Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved PRAISE FOR ELIZABETH MOON TRADING IN DANGER “Bound to appeal to fans of David Weber’s Honor Harrington series, this sf adventure is filled with fast-paced action and well-conceived characters.”– Booklist “Compelling . . . a superior novel . . . Trading in Danger has . . . originality and intelligence.”–SciFi.com AGAINST THE ODDS “Readers will delight in the twisting, thorny adventure in the compelling continuation to this popular series.” –Publishers Weekly “A fun fast-paced mix of space and soap opera.”– Locus From the Inside Flap Kylara Vatta, risk-taking, rule-breaking, can-do heroine of Trading in Danger, is back in business–the kind that's anything but usual–in the new military science fiction adventure by ace action storyteller Elizabeth Moon.The exciting military career she hoped for never got off the ground–but Ky Vatta ended up seeing plenty of combat when she took the helm of one of the commercial transport vessels in her family's fleet . . . and steered it into a full-blown war. Now the lessons she learned in that trial by fire are about to pay off: because this time, the war has come to her. To be exact, someone unknown has launched a full-throttle offensive against Vatta Transport Ltd., Ky's father's interstellar shipping empire. In short order, most of Ky's family is killed, and subsequent attacks sever vital lines of communication, leaving Ky fighting, in every sense, to survive.Determined to identify the ruthless mystery enemy and avenge her family's name, Ky needs not only firepower but information. And she gets both in spades–from the band of stranded mercenaries she hooks up with, from her black-sheep cousin, Stella, who's been leading a secret life, and from Stella's roguish ex-lover, Rafe. Together they struggle to penetrate the tangled web of political intrigue that's wreaking havoc within InterStellar Communications, whose effective operation their own livelihoods–and perhaps lives–depend on.But the infighting proves to be infectious, and it isn't long before Ky's hired military muscle are turning their suspicions on the enigmatic Rafe, whose wealth of knowledge about ISC's clashing factions and startling new technologies has begun to make him smell like a rat . . . or a mole. With swift, violent destruction a very real possibility, the last thing Ky needs is a crew divided against itself–and she's prepared to take whatever measures are necessary to ensure that Vatta stays in business, as well as in one piece.What she's not prepared for is the shocking truth behind the terror– and a confrontation with murderous treachery from a source as unexpected as it is unrelenting. PRAISE FOR ELIZABETH MOON TRADING IN DANGER "Bound to appeal to fans of David Weber's Honor Harrington series, this sf adventure is filled with fast-paced action and well-conceived characters." - Booklist "Compelling . . . a superior novel . . . Trading in Danger has . . . originality and intelligence." - SciFi.com AGAINST THE ODDS "Readers will delight in the twisting, thorny adventure in the compelling continuation to this popular series." - Publishers Weekly "A fun fast-paced mix of space and soap opera." - Locus Elizabeth Moon is the author of many novels, including Trading in Danger , Nebula Award-winner The Speed of Dark , Against the Odds , Change of Command , and Remnant Population , which was a Hugo Award finalist. After earning a degree in history from Rice University, she spent three years in the Marine Corps, then earned a degree in biology from the University of Texas, Austin. She lives in Florence, Texas. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER ONEKylara Vatta looked at the mass of paperwork from Belinta's Economic Development Bureau and sighed. The real life of a tradeship captain: paperwork and more paperwork, negotiation with shippers, customers, Customs officials. The life she hadn't wanted, when she chose to enter the Slotter Key Spaceforce Academy, and the life she had fallen back into when she was expelled. Boring. Mundane.Not that her recent experiences in Sabine had been boring or mundane--terrifying was more like it--and no one would want another trip like that.Except that she did. She remembered very clearly the rush of excitement, the soaring glee of the fight itself, the guilty delight when she'd killed Paison and Kristoffson. So either she wasn't sane or...or nothing. She thought of the diamonds tucked into her underwear drawer. Not enough to restore her old tub of a ship completely, but enough to take her to somewhere else, somewhere she could make the kind of life she really wanted. Perhaps the mercenaries would accept her violent tendencies; they'd offered a chance. Perhaps someone else. It would annoy her family, but not as much as the truth would hurt them.No. She had to finish one job at least. Crew depended on her. The ship belonged to her family, as well, and she could not possibly earn enough to buy it away by the next stop or the next. She sighed again, signed another sheet, and stared at the next. All right, then. Take this old tub to Leonora, deliver that cargo, then to Lastway. If she couldn't finance a refit by then, return to the original plan and go home by commercial passenger ship. If she made enough profit, enough to do the refit, she could get that done and bring the ship back to Slotter Key, and then resign. Or--she stared into a distance far beyond her cabin bulkhead. She could send the ship back with someone else. Quincy, for instance, knew enough to run the ship herself.In the long run, her family would be better off without her. If her father knew how she'd felt when she killed...no. She had had those nightmares, trying to explain to that gentle man, hoping for his understanding but seeing the horror in his face. Better the smothering, overprotective love that had annoyed her in their last conversation than that horror, that disgust, that rejection. If she went home, he would sense something; he would try to probe, try to get her to confide in him, and eventually he would wear her down. It would be worse than anything else that had happened, to have her father sorry she was ever born.She should just go away. Years later, maybe, she might be able to explain it to him, and he might be able to accept it. Years might put a safe skin on the raw truth of what she was.She worked her way through the rest of the forms, then decided to take them to the local postal drop herself. Belinta Station had few amenities, but a walk would be refreshing in itself."Quincy--I'm going to drop the paperwork off," she said into the ship's intercom."Find anything to load, or do you want us to start transferring what we left in storage?""I haven't found anything yet," Ky said. "I may have to go downside for that. Go on and load...see if you can get some of the station dockworkers to help with that. Usual rates and all."She glanced at herself in the mirror and decided she was presentable enough. She needed a new uniform--the one she had left after Sabine no longer had the crisp, perfect tailoring her mother had paid for--but only if she was staying with Vatta. If she joined a mercenary company, she would wear its uniform; if she stayed independent, she'd have to find one of her own design. But to drop off forms to be transmitted to a bureaucracy, gray tunic and slacks should be sufficient. She clipped on the Belinta Station access pass.Outside the ship, Belinta Station hardly bustled with activity. Only three ships were in dock, and the other two were insystem haulers servicing Belinta's meager satellite mining operations. On their own dockside, Quincy was talking to a burly man in the ubiquitous green tunic of Belinta dockworkers. Beeah, beside her, held a compad ready to record employee data if Quincy's negotiations were successful. Ky walked briskly past two men chatting on a bench, a woman standing by a lift entrance, barely restraining a bouncing toddler, the faded ads for Belinta's few and unenticing tourist resorts, and turned left into the wide main corridor. Here were the currency exchanges, banks, communications services--local and ansible--Belinta Port Authority, the hiring hall, and, finally, the postal service. Midshift, few others were in sight. Someone with a briefcase just going into Belinta Savings & Loan, two women chatting as they emerged from Allsystems Exchange.Beyond were rows of blanked openings to spaces that would someday, if Belinta proved prosperous, house more services, more stores, more people. No traffic at all moved down there.Ky turned into the postal service's entrance and walked up to the counter where a display read NOW SERVING NUMBER SIX EIGHTY-TWO. The only clerk in sight did not look up, but said, "Take a number." Typical Belintan courtesy, Ky thought, and looked around for the number generator. By the entrance. She pulled the tab; the counter display changed to NOW SERVING SIX EIGHTY-THREE and the clerk said, "Number six eighty-three!" in an annoyed tone, as if she'd kept him waiting."This is all for the Economic Development Bureau," Ky said."To whose attention?" asked the clerk."It doesn't matter. Just the EDB.""It has to be directed to an individual," the clerk said. "You can't send mail to the whole bureau.""It says on the form," Ky said, pointing to the block under RETURN TO. "No name, just the bureau.""It has to have a name," the clerk said. "It's the rules. All mail to government agencies must be directed to an individual."Ky was tempted to make up a name. Instead, she said, "Do you have a directory?""Customers are not allowed to use our confidential directories or communications devices," the clerk intoned. "This is a security issue. Customers are advised to identify the correct recipient prior to arriving in the postal service office. Next, please."Ky glanced behind her. No one stood in line. "It wouldn't take a moment to look it up.""Next, please." The clerk still wasn't looking at her. Ky wanted to reach across the counter and wring his skinny neck, but that was the impulse of a moment. This was part of being a tradeship captain; this was the kind of senseless, ridiculous, annoying nonsense she could expect."Fine," she said instead. "I'll deliver it myself." After all, she had to go downside anyway, to find out if there was any cargo worth carrying from this wretched planet."Glad to be of service have a nice day," the clerk said all in one breath.Ky went back the way she'd come, past the corridor that led to the docking area, past Goodtime Eats and Jerry's Real Food and Quick-snack, where the two women she'd seen earlier were head to head over a small table, to the ticket office for the shuttle service. She could not remember just when the daily service left--"Two and a half hours," the clerk said. "Be at the boarding area a half hour before departure."That gave time to go back to her ship and change. She turned to go but a screech from the PA system stopped her. "What's that?""I don't know," the clerk said."Stay wherever you are," a bone-shaking voice said. "All personnel stay wherever you are. Emergency crews one and two, to dockside on the double. All personnel...""My ship!" Ky said. "I have to get back--"But the ticket office entrance was closed, the metal grate locking with a final chung even as she moved toward it."You heard 'em," the clerk said. "We're all supposed to stay put.""Well, I can't," Ky said. "Open that thing.""Can't," the clerk said. "It's automatic, like section seals. Station Security controls it. Unless you've got the override code like one of the emergency crews..."The PA announcement had stopped. Fifteen minutes later, the grate slid back into its slot, squeaking a little. "Return to normal activity," the PA said. "All personnel return to normal activity." Still no announcement of what had prompted the lockdown. Ky hurried back to the docking area. She saw nothing unusual except a Station Security officer standing near Gary Tobai's open hold bay talking to Quincy."What was that about?" she asked, coming up to them."Nothing to concern you, madam," said the officer. "Please stand away.""It's the captain," Quincy said, just as Ky said, "It's my ship; it concerns me.""Oh." The man looked confused. "You're not in uniform.""It needs cleaning," Ky said. "Here's my tag." She held it out, and he scanned it. "What happened?""We believe an attempt was made to rob your ship," the man said. "Individuals known to us as of dubious character were hired to move cargo, and this individual"--he nodded at Quincy--"noticed something untoward with one of the containers and challenged the individual transporting it, suspecting that a substitution had been made. Two individuals ran away; this individual called the alarm."Theft by casual dockside labor was a constant threat, Ky knew. "Did you catch them?""They have not been appr... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Kylara Vatta, risk-taking, rule-breaking, can-do heroine of
  • Trading in Danger,
  • is back in business–the kind that’s anything but usual–in the new military science fiction adventure by ace action storyteller Elizabeth Moon.The exciting military career she hoped for never got off the ground–but Ky Vatta ended up seeing plenty of combat when she took the helm of one of the commercial transport vessels in her family’s fleet . . . and steered it into a full-blown war. Now the lessons she learned in that trial by fire are about to pay off: because this time, the war has come to her. To be exact, someone unknown has launched a full-throttle offensive against Vatta Transport Ltd., Ky’s father’s interstellar shipping empire. In short order, most of Ky’s family is killed, and subsequent attacks sever vital lines of communication, leaving Ky fighting, in every sense, to survive.Determined to identify the ruthless mystery enemy and avenge her family’s name, Ky needs not only firepower but information. And she gets both in spades–from the band of stranded mercenaries she hooks up with, from her black-sheep cousin, Stella, who’s been leading a secret life, and from Stella’s roguish ex-lover, Rafe. Together they struggle to penetrate the tangled web of political intrigue that’s wreaking havoc within InterStellar Communications, whose effective operation their own livelihoods–and perhaps lives–depend on.But the infighting proves to be infectious, and it isn’t long before Ky’s hired military muscle are turning their suspicions on the enigmatic Rafe, whose wealth of knowledge about ISC’s clashing factions and startling new technologies has begun to make him smell like a rat . . . or a mole. With swift, violent destruction a very real possibility, the last thing Ky needs is a crew divided against itself–and she’s prepared to take whatever measures are necessary to ensure that Vatta stays in business, as well as in one piece.What she’s not prepared for is the shocking truth behind the terror– and a confrontation with murderous treachery from a source as unexpected as it is unrelenting.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(1K)
★★★★
25%
(432)
★★★
15%
(259)
★★
7%
(121)
-7%
(-122)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Enjoyable

Captain Kylara Vatta has only recently come out of a full blown war, only to land directly into another one. Or is it a different one? Kylara finally makes her way to Lastway, the originally scheduled final stop for her commercial carrier when she receives disturbing news of attacks on her homeland and on Vatta Transport and the family. But unfortunately, the communication ansibles have been knocked out and she is playing in the dark. Her military training is what spurts her to take the offensive, and even though she does not yet know who the enemy is, she begins to prepare her commercial ship for war time defense. Yet, she struggles to balance her financial and is constantly interrupted by attempts made on her life.

And then, totally unexpectedly, her cousin, Stella shows up. The "bimbo blonde" who gave the family codes to her first lover and is generally viewed as useless by the family. Except that Kylara realizes that Stella, much like herself, has been pigeonholed by the family and underneath the bubblehead, there is a sophisticated spy who has been working for the Vatta family business for years. Stella has brought along partners, Rafe and the young Vatta cousin, Toby; and the terrible news that both of Kylara's parents and Stella's parents have perished in the attacks.

Kylara quickly makes use of her new resources and launches a serious mission that entails survival of her ship and crew, saving Vatta family members, and identifying and removing the enemy. Except that they still have no idea who the enemy is. Rafe, whose background is as obscure as Stella's, provides some clues. And Kylara gains an unexpected ally when a mercenary force offers its services to her ... for a small fee: trade and profit.

All her allies have secrets, but so does Kylara herself. Someone she knew at the academy sends her an unusual package, the contents of which could help, but also hinder, Kylara's mission. And she has yet to divulge to her friends how she feels about killing people.

In all, this second book in the series matches the first for characterization and plot. It's slow moving at the beginning, but the second half of the book picks up pace quickly, like its predecessor. Circumstances twist so that the heroine is forced in a direction that leaves few choices. Kylara is a likeable, yet not perfect, heroine. She makes mistakes, some of them deadly, but lands on her feet in the end, earning respect from her peers and readers alike.

As with all of Moon's books, this work makes for an enjoyable read.
24 people found this helpful
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An explosive start to a new series

Letters of marque and reprisal were the thin legal cover given to private armed warships allowing them to attack other vessels and not be considered pirates. Well, sometimes to not be considered pirates.

In this well-paced and well-written space opera, Moon uses a traditional plot device, placing her young heroine in danger with no backup and just barely enough resources to fight her way out of it. The pacing is fast and the plot is sound. The characterization is almost entirely static and not a particular strength of the novel, but it is plenty good enough to sustain the story.

While this is technically the second book in the series, the first one was substantially inferior and really does not have to be read in order to enjoy the current offering. And have no doubt that this is a series -- far too many plot threads are left open at the end of the novel for it to be anything else.

The setting is the deep space version of the Caribbean, where trading vessels ply the spaceways between independent planets, pirates prey on the traders, and the only military/police protection available are mercenaries and privateers. The most successful of these tradeship consortiums is Vatta Transport -- until someone attacks both the Vatta family and the Vatta company in one devestating blow. At the same time, someone has also attacked the company that holds the exclusive monopoly on faster-than-light interstellar communication. Since ISC and Vatta have longstanding ties, the two attacks are almost certainly tied together.

With the family in shambles and all communications compromised, it falls to Ky Vatta, the young hero of TRADING IN DANGER, to somehow survive, gather up her remaining family, and strike back at whoever has attacked Vatta. Along the way she picks up a few more resources and a few more allies, but also makes a few more enemies.
7 people found this helpful
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Great Space Opera! Moon Delivers Again!

Once you start MARQUE AND REPRISAL, it's a hard book to put down. I heard Elizabeth Moon read an excerpt from this before it was published, and had to wait impatiently for many weeks to find out what happened next. MARQUE AND REPRISAL is a delightful read for anybody who enjoys a good space opera. If you like strong female characters, you'll love it.

MARQUE AND REPRISAL is apparently the second volume of a great new series from the reliably fine Moon. I missed the first in the series (TRADING DANGER). I will go back to read it, as I loved this one. If you read this out of order (as I did), note that Moon does a great job of telling you what you need to know. I never had the annoying sense of having missed something.

MARQUE AND REPRISAL delivers everything I look for in a space adventure series novel. The book kept me up late, as chapter after chapter had me asking, "What then? What's next?"

At the beginning of MARQUE AND REPRISAL, we meet Kylara Vatta, reluctant tradeship captain. She wanted a military life, a life of adventure, but was expelled from the Slotter Key Spaceforce Academy. Life is looking boring and mundane. Very quickly, though, life becomes anything but boring or mundane. Someone is out to destroy the Vatta family. Someone who had connections with the Slotter Key government. Ky Vatta is up against a conspiracy. They are almost certainly out to get her, too, and she does not even know why.

Over the course of the book, Ky gathers a motley crew, a cast of characters we enjoy meeting, and that we will look forward to seeing more of in future books. A very few Vattas survive, and one hooks her up with a charming and unreliable con man, Rafe. We even rescue a Jack Russell terrier, Puddles. I don't want to say much, as I don't want to spoil any surprises.

MARQUE AND REPRISAL delivers a satisfying ending, but leaves enough still to explore that we can hope for many more volumes of this highly entertaining series. I am going back to read TRADING DANGER, and can't wait to read the next installment!
5 people found this helpful
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Moon at her best

I was a little doubtful before the start of this series. A family of freighter operators? I was pleasantly surprised to find Trading in in Danger an excellent book, and the sequel, Marque and Reprisal is even better, possibly Moon's best SF warfare book in years. Ky Vanta is a combination of Herris Serano and Esmay Suiza, so if you liked Moon's other series you'll love this one. The action and tension are maintained throughout, with a complex plot and great characters. This is one of those rare books I picked up and didn't want to put down, much better than her Suiza series, which is pretty good in itself.
4 people found this helpful
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New series off to an awesome start

Marque and Reprisal were letters that would be given to privately armed warships, allowing them to attack other vessels and they would not be considered as pirates. These warships would serve as somewhat of a navy, if none was available.

This is the first book written by Moon that I have read, and it was awesome. The setting reminded me of a combination of Lost in Space and Pirates of the Caribbean. Traders must rely on the needs of independent planets and systems and outrun the cut-throat, greedy pirates. And Ky, the young heroine in danger, with no backup, must rely on the protection of a group of stray mercenaries, who have their suspicions set on one of Ky's crew members.

Vatta Transport has been attacked, almost completely destroyed with a single, decisive blow by an unknown enemy, and no one knows why. Accounts frozen and credits gone, Ky Vatta is fighting for the life she once knew. On the run from pirates, highly skilled assassins and her other unrevealed enemies, Ky fights back using her military trained mind and her father's command implant. She is determined to stop at nothing to save her father's, once grand, empire.

I thought that this was a really well written book and it had an awesome sci-fi warfare plot. I don't think that I will ever be able to put this book down. This book is awesome and I hope to be able to finish the series sometime.
3 people found this helpful
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Captivating, even with a few flaws.

Overall good quality. Interesting and varied set of characters, and good character development. Decent size. Reasonable amount of action, especially in later chapters. Great punchline at the end of the next-to-last chapter. Well thought out and believable space battle scenes.

Having said that, there are some deficiencies that keep this book from acheiving top-quality status: 1) Lack of action in the early-mid chapters. 2) Puppy character serves no pupose in this book - maybe he'll devlop into something in a follow-on book in this series. 3) Some unbelievable coincendences - like when fleeing Stella and Toby find back door ajar on security zealot/spy Rafe's antique book cover business on remote planet's space station, and Rafe is old flame of Stella. 4) (Possible spoiler follows) The technological leap of having inter-solar ansible communication technology going from huge 100 man platforms into a few secret ship-based platforms is believable enough, but then we have the unbelievable leap in technology of an ansible turning out to exist as implant in Rafe's skull, and then being magically transferred to Ky's implant during "mind meld" - This ridiculous sequence is totally out of place in the book, and indeed serves no purpose in this particular book; it is an obvious lead in to a next book with Ky having this "super" capability... while this situation seriously detracts from the quality of this book, I'm even more afraid of what it could portend in future books from this series.
3 people found this helpful
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My Review of "Marque & Reprisal"...

This book is an excellent sequel to "Trading in Danger", and if you read the first book you'll love the second. For me, I couldn't put the book down am anxiously waiting for the third book of the "Vatta Series". I hope TPTB will release the third book soon. Great job Elizabeth Moon!
2 people found this helpful
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EXCITING BOOK, GREAT READING

Kylarra Vatta is back. Our indominable heroine from TRADING IN DANGER. In that book she was kicked out of the Space Academy and given an old vatta ship to take to be sold for scrap. Not only did she save the ship, get it upgraded, she managed to get caught up in a war. At the end she had to decide if she wanted to trade for Vatta, or go out on her own.

As MARQUE AND REPRISAL begins she has not decided what to do when news comes that Vatta has been attacked and her family killed. Someone is trying to destroy Vatta and ISC. ISC controls the ansibles that keep the planets in touch and control the movement and distribution of goods for trade. It seems the war she got into in the 1st book was just the first shot in an attempt to destroy both companies.

Ky doesn't know if she is the last Vatta or if others live. When her cousin Stella arrives with Toby, the only survivor of one Vatta ship, and Rafe, a very mysterious con man, she sets out to find out who killed her family, rescue whoever is left, and bring as much harm as possible on those responsible. She reminds us of Heris Serrano and Esmay Sousa, full of honor, courage, determination and just plain old guts.

Rafe has several names because he is a deep cover spy for ISC. Ky doesn't trust those good looks a bit, she has been bitten once to many times.

The action is fast, the situations explosive, and you are on the edge of your seat. This is Elizabeth Moon at her best. Don't miss it.
2 people found this helpful
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Neat piece of space adventure

Marque and Reprisal is the second is Elizabeth Moon's new series, Vatta's War. The first novel (Trading in Danger) introduced Kylara (Ky) Vatta, a young member of the prominent trading family Vatta who is kicked out of her planet (Slotter Key) Spaceforce Academy on trumped up charges. She takes over an aged Vatta trading ship, and finds herself in the midst of a quasi-war, as pirates have taken over an FTL communication station. She acquits herself well, learns (to her horror) that she likes killing bad guys, and seems in position to possibly own her own ship. The novel was fun enough, but seemed not to be about much -- pure scene-setting, character-introducing.

Marque and Reprisal starts the real story. As the novel opens, the Vatta holdings on Slotter Key are bombed and much of the Vatta family is killed. It seems that some shadowy force is interested in taking over power in the Galactic (or human sub-Galactic) polity. There are soon assassination attempts on Ky herself. This makes her realize that something serious is going on.

A formerly disgraced cousin is sent to help her and get her a message. This woman, Stella, hooks up with an old lover, Rafe, and rescues one young Vatta family member on a targeted ship. The three of them find their way to Ky's ship, which is soon in a life-or-death battle with a disgruntled Vatta family member, who seems to be in the pay of the rebels. Ky, of course, is equal to the task of outwitting this slimy fellow. The story of how she does so is pretty fun. It's a neat piece of pretty classical space opera -- lots of adventure, some neat ideas, some nice tech. I look forward to reading the rest of Moon's new series -- she remains one of our best writers of absorbing adventure SF.
1 people found this helpful
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This is the second in a series of exceptional space ...

This is the second in a series of exceptional space opera by Elizabeth Moon, who writes with clarity and imagination.