More Than Honor

by David Weber

Honor Harrington (Collections and Selections — 0.1), Worlds of Honor (1), Honor Harrington Universe - Deutsch (8), Honor Harrington Universe (Collections and Selections — Anthology 1)

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In hardcover for the first time, first entry in the Worlds of Honor anthology series, by three giants of military SF. Honorverse short novels by Weber, David Drake, and S.M. Stirling. The first entry in the Worlds of Honor anthology series, featuring stories set in David Weber's New York TImes best-selling Honorverse. Featuring "A Grand Tour" by master of military SF David Drake; "A Whiff of Grapeshot" by best-selling author S.M. Stirling: and "A Beautiful Friendship" by David Weber, the show more novella that would later become the first entry in Weber's Star Kingdom series. Also includes Honor Harrington series essay "The Universe of Honor Harrington" by Weber. show less

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7 reviews
As is often the case with collections of short fiction, I enjoyed some parts of this book better than others.

A Beautiful Friendship (David Weber)
I really liked this story, which chronicles the first meeting between humans and treecats. David Weber later expanded this story into a YA novel with the same title, and as soon as I finished reading this version I went onto the Baen website to purchase and download the novel so I could read it too. I liked seeing more of the treecats as full-fledged characters.

A Grand Tour (David Drake)
This was my least favourite portion of the anthology. It wasn't badly written, but it seemed only tangentially connected to the rest of the Honor Harrington universe. It really seemed like it could have easily show more been dropped into another science fiction universe simply by changing the names of a few places and groups of people.

A Whiff of Grapeshot (S.M. Stirling)
This short story fills in background for an event that was mentioned more or less in passing in the book [b:In Enemy Hands|77740|In Enemy Hands (Honor Harrington, #7)|David Weber|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1321561738s/77740.jpg|2684782]. I liked this one a lot, and the events it covered really work best in short story format rather than as part of a novel as a whole.

The Universe of Honor Harrington (David Weber)
And this one read like a history book. Which, to be fair, is more or less what it is, so it fulfils its purpose in that regard. I enjoyed it for the background information it provides, but it isn't really a story. It was a slow read, and probably not strictly necessary, but for people who will read through all the appendix information and footnotes in various books because they find them fascinating this is an excellent addition. I do like how well everything hangs together.


Out of the collection as a whole, my favourite part was definitely A Beautiful Friendship.
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This collection of short stories/novelettes was very uneven.

"A Beautiful Friendship" by David Weber was excellent. It tells the story of the first encounter between treecats and humans. I fell in love with the characters and want to read more.

"A Grand Tour" by David Drake was just horrid. It really had nothing to do with the "Honorverse" other than a few trappings. He could have used "Federation," "warp drive," and "impulse engines" just as easily and it would have had as much to do with the Star Trek universe. Furthermore, I was taught that "Melungeons" was a less-than-polite word. To have all the stereotypes present for those people (and they straightened up and did well under the supervision of the superior Manticoreans) was show more offensive.

"A Whiff of Grapeshot" by S. M. Stirling told the story behind the Leveler Uprising. I'm not much for the Havenites, but this did fill in plenty of background and was well-written.

"The Universe of Honor Harrington" by David Weber was at times more technical than I liked and my eyes glazed over. However, I am glad I stuck with it as I learned more about the political background of the worlds.

This collection is for fans of the series.
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½
As is often the case with collections of short fiction, I enjoyed some parts of this book better than others.

A Beautiful Friendship (David Weber)
I really liked this story, which chronicles the first meeting between humans and treecats. David Weber later expanded this story into a YA novel with the same title, and as soon as I finished reading this version I went onto the Baen website to purchase and download the novel so I could read it too. I liked seeing more of the treecats as full-fledged characters.

A Grand Tour (David Drake)
This was my least favourite portion of the anthology. It wasn't badly written, but it seemed only tangentially connected to the rest of the Honor Harrington universe. It really seemed like it could have easily show more been dropped into another science fiction universe simply by changing the names of a few places and groups of people.

A Whiff of Grapeshot (S.M. Stirling)
This short story fills in background for an event that was mentioned more or less in passing in the book In Enemy Hands. I liked this one a lot, and the events it covered really work best in short story format rather than as part of a novel as a whole.

The Universe of Honor Harrington (David Weber)
And this one read like a history book. Which, to be fair, is more or less what it is, so it fulfils its purpose in that regard. I enjoyed it for the background information it provides, but it isn't really a story. It was a slow read, and probably not strictly necessary, but for people who will read through all the appendix information and footnotes in various books because they find them fascinating this is an excellent addition. I do like how well everything hangs together.

Out of the collection as a whole, my favourite part was definitely A Beautiful Friendship.
show less
I really liked the first story about Honor's ancestor and the first contact with the tree cats on Sphinx, as well as the third story about the Levellers' uprising in Nouveau Paris. The second story, about the scientists studying pre-human spacefarers' artifacts, with a standoff between the Peeps and Manticore thrown in, seemed like it would make the basis for a longer and more fleshed-out book rather than contributing to our understanding of the Honorverse. I even read the giant info dump at the end of the book and actually learned a lot. It was helpful to understand the colonization process and the history of both Manticore and Haven.
Since this is the first anthology, why is the anthology series called Worlds of Honor? Oh well, it sounds better, I guess. Anyway. I just felt like rereading Weber's story, how Stephanie and Climbs Quickly met. Drake's story is good but it feels more like a Lieutenant Leary story than anything in Weber's universe (and I didn't feel like reading that), and I dislike McQueen enough that I don't want to reread Stirling's story. And it's very annoying that Weber accepted that story directly as canon - not because I don't like McQueen, but because he uses it as background for the next book without recapping it or giving flashbacks or anything. There are several mentions of the events, but a retelling (maybe from a different POV?) would have show more incorporated it more smoothly. Oh well. show less
½
The two good Honorverse stories are good ones . The Drake work is a good Leary story dressed in Honorverse characters. The Universe Section provides a users manual for entering the Worlds of Honor.
½

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222+ Works 77,417 Members
David Weber was born in Cleveland, Ohio on October 24, 1952. He received an undergraduate degree from Warren Wilson College and attended graduate school at Appalachian State University. He ran Weber Associates, a small advertising and public relations agency, for several years. He currently writes science fiction and fantasy full-time. His first show more novel, Insurrection, in collaboration with Steve White, was published in 1990. He has authored or co-authored over 40 books including The Honor of the Queen, In Enemy Hands, The Service of the Sword, Storm from the Shadows, the Honor Harrington series, the Safehold series, and the Star Kingdom series. Weber's first book in the Manticore Ascendant Series, co-authored with Timothy Zahn, made the New York Times bestseller list in October 2014. At the Sign of Triumph, book 9 in the Safehold series, made the New York Times bestseller list in 2016. Book 10, Through Fiery Trials, was published in January 2019. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Drake, David (Author)

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Bevine, Victor (Narrator)
Ganser, L. J. , (Narrator)
Hvam, Khristine (Narrator)
Mattingly, David (Cover artist)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
More Than Honor
Original title
More Than Honor
Original publication date
1998-01 (collection) (collection)
People/Characters
Honor Harrington
First words
Climbs Quickly scurried up the nearest trunk, then paused at the first cross-branch to clean his sticky true-hands and hand-feet with fastidious care.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And so, in 1900 PD, the People's Republic had no choice but to look for fresh fields to conquer...and found, directly in its path, between it and the additional worlds it had to have, a small but wealthy star system known as the Star Kingdom of Manticore.

Classifications

Genres
Science Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3573 .E217Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

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Members
1,209
Popularity
20,448
Reviews
7
Rating
½ (3.61)
Languages
6 — Czech, English, French, German, Polish, Slovak
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
13
ASINs
6