Is Lois McMaster Bujold really a tough skill - fiction author ? Her piece of work does n’t appear , at first coup d’oeil , to revolve around scientific concepts . But , suggests one blogger , that ’s just because she ’s rather more elusive about writing about hard skill than some author .
James Nicollasked on his blogfor the great unwashed to name women who write hard scientific discipline fiction , and Martin Wisse suggested the Miles Vorkosigan series :
Bujold writes hard science fiction you do n’t notice , as it ’s all cover in plain scene in the background .

This sop up objections from some other posters , who were under the impression that the science in Bujold ’s writing is shunt to the background and not really fundamental to the story . Over on his own web log , Wisse responds :
At first coup d’oeil it does look like a received mil - sf series , but the adept of Bujold is that she writes stories that revolve around science , technology and the sociological and ethnic impact of these , without you realising she is doing this .
Much hard skill fable tolerate from technofetishism , where the characters go around fondly discover each character of ship involve part in a space battle or go into the finer details of the ammunition they ’re using in the thick of a firefight . Even when the focus is less militaristic , it can sometimes seem the futurity is entirely populated by geeks . This is not the case with Bujold : her characters are people comfortable with using futuretech , without particularly noticing it or how it influences their company , but this influence is still there . As a lector it means you yourself have to work hard to notice thing too , as they ’re not pointed out to you .

He give way on to point out one model of a succeeding applied science that ’s central to the stories in Bujold ’s world : the uterine replicator , which allows women to avoid suffering the “ danger and side effects of pregnancy . ” You see this technology introduced to Barrayar , and you witness how it change gild .
So what do you think ? Is “ technofetishism ” a crucial part of hard science fiction piece of writing , or just something it ’s prone to sometimes ? [ Wis[s]e Words ]
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