To anyone else looking for a similar reading experience, I recommend the Liaden series by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. It’s one of the Geek’s favorite series, and I have just read all of it in the space of about two months, except for the one book that just came out, and most of the short stories, which are kind of hard to find. Anyway. It’s space opera about merchant families from a variety of human cultures (sadly, not as many aliens this time, though there is a friendly empire of giant turtles and some psychic koalas). For a pulpy space opera series, it's got surprisingly deep messages about family, relationships, and responsibility. And economics. All the protagonist factions are based in a philosophy of peaceful sustainability—the goal of business is not to please shareholders, but to train the next generation to keep things running peacefully. So it’s easy to pick out the antagonists, who are usually abusive relatives or power-hungry secret agencies. [Updated 2022/12/20] Or unscrupulous businesspeople trying to turn commerce into capitalism.
The Geek and I have been working out the order that makes most sense to read the novels in. Here's what we've got right now.
- Balance of Trade: Teenage Terran trader Jethri Gobelyn leaves the family ship run by his unpleasant mother, becomes the apprentice of a Liaden master trader, and learns how to be Liaden while dealing with prejudice from both sides.
- Trade Secret: Jethri sets out to find stolen property and ends up discovering his father's legacy.
- Fair Trade: Jethri is put in charge of his own trade ship, and gets involved in the politics of using his father's work to protect interstellar trade in the face of encroaching space dust and would-be capitalism. For the purposes of this reading order, this book introduces the psychic koalas. [updated 2022/12/20]
- Local Custom: This is the beginning of the main series about Korval, a family of Liaden aristocrats who specialize in piloting. Terran linguistics professor Anne Davis is awkwardly reunited with the father of her son, who turns out to be a Korval, and must figure out how and whether she fits into the family.
- Scout's Progress: Liaden math professor Aelliana Caylon escapes an abusive family situation with help from Daav yos'Phelium, an ace pilot who just happens to be the new leader of Korval.
- Mouse and Dragon: Daav and Aelliana get married and have space courier adventures. Not a lot happens in this one, but it's sweet and peaceful and it sets up some important characters for later (including the psychic koalas; this is the first book in publication order that includes them). Major character death at the end when everything suddenly goes pear-shaped.
- Conflict of Honors: Twenty-ish years later, Anne's son Shan is the captain of a Korval trade ship. He hires exiled psychic priestess Priscilla and helps her get her self-confidence back.
- Agent of Change: Daav and Aelliana's son Val Con is a spy for a shadowy Liaden government agency, the Department of the Interior. After Terran mercenary Miri Robertson refuses to kill him, he seriously rethinks his life and starts working with her against the Department. (The giant turtles first appear in this one, and there's a short story about how Val Con met them.)
Summaries after this point contain spoilers for previous books. Everything has started to happen all at once.