SWM wrote:The Young's had nothing to do with getting her shipped off to Basilisk Station.
Isn't that quotation from a story that takes place before On Basilisk Station?
cthia wrote:Didn't mean to suggest that Basilisk Station was on the Young's shoulders, but that I tend to clump the entire atmosphere of bashing Honor all in one pot, stirred by the Youngs.
It's from the wiki.
SWM wrote:
Well, then I don't know where that quote comes from. But it is certainly true that Dmitri Young tried to hamper Harrington's career. It is likely that he had some success in slowing her career down, up until Basilisk Station. After Basilisk Station, there weren't many opportunities for Dmitri to have any effect, and a few years later Dmitri died. But I don't think you can say that Dmitri sparked Harrington's career, since, as I said before, he had nothing to do with the postings which boosted her career.
cthia wrote:But he was responsible for the atmosphere caused by the attitudes of some key naval officers and government officials. Janacek and High Ridge come to mind. Because he was the Conservative Party whip, backed by the North Hollow files, much of Honor's troubles, and postings, IMO, were indirectly related to the Young's - the personal strife in her life. In many ways I think Honor became the product of that strife in her life. Strife that is directly traceable back to the Young's.
In fact, I'm not sure about 'come what may,' if White Haven hadn't secretly nourished Honor's career.
Remember, the enmity between Honor and Pavel was ignited long before Basilisk Station - which implies that the Young's underhandedness was as well.
Cthia, I didn't read the wiki, but SWM is on target.
Honor hammered Young into hamburger in the showers while they were both middies (1879-83 somewhere), and Youngs's father (Dmitri) got Santino assigned to War Maiden (1883) so she'd fail her middie cruise. Santino gets relieved for cause, she gets a medal and ensign a bit early. Win!
As Broadsword's exec (Long Way Home) she had to deal with a Young cousin (CDR Ngyuen Tyumen or however it was spelled) who was a jackass. But neither Honor nor Young-kin got physical, and it didn't get into direct conflict until the avalanche. Young-kin is relieved, Honor gets both public recognition and a medal. Win!
They don't meet again until Basilisk and then Hancock; but Pavel gets with Housman's cousin there to pass on slander. Doesn't work out for Young. Win!
For all those years after the shower, Young and his kin spread stories and slander about Honor. This doesn't reach the ears of the junior officers of Fearless, it is intended for senior officers. Balislisk was used by her supporters, but Basilisk is used by Honor's enemies too--she usurped command, disabled an unarmed dispatch boat (with Havenite casualties) and destroyed a freighter which almost got the SKM into a war(infuriating not only the Youngs, but the Liberals, and terrifying the Progressives). She disrupted the SKM's own commerce (ok, smuggling, but that is commerce) and insulted Hauptmann, a major industrialist and shipbuilder. And Haven calls her a convicted mass murderer and a maniac. This reduces Honor's win almost to a draw.
In Yeltsin, she attacks a diplomat, and refuses to back off from a confrontation with a vastly more powerful ship. Hotheaded and irresponsible, according to the Old Boy Network.
The spin they were putting on all that made Honor sound like a lunatic; which is what Sir Yancey Parks thought she was too, and Parks wasn't on the Young payroll. Or Hauptmann's either. He and Honor also weren't friends, just professionally polite (until he puts Paul on Honor's ship to rotate home). There is little in the text later about Sir Yancy.
Again, it all turns around and bites the Youngs' in the ass in SVW and FoD; and serves to cement the enmity of the Conservatives (Janacek, High Ridge, Young) and the Liberals (New Kiev, Houseman). And Hauptmann could buy additional enmity from the Progressives, or New Men if he wanted to.
The idea that it was the Young's in particular that made her the Salamander is interesting, but not necessary; she had already ticked off a foreign nation before Basilisk (Silesia, the Casimir raid) and if the efforts of the Peeps to sieze Basilisk had succeeded, she wouldn't have had Young to deal with at Hancock. It would have played out differently, but she would have got promoted up eventually.
Rob
edited but still too long!