munroburton wrote:cthia wrote:Something interesting to consider is if McQueen had lived, would she have been the CO of Operation Beatrice? And if so, would she have fared any better?
She would have been the head of state of Haven had she survived, unless you're suggesting an alternate universe where Pierre and Saint-Just kept her away from Nouveau Paris... and the front lines. Empress, Citizen Chairwoman, Hereditary President or an actual bona fide elected President intent on winning all her elections by any means in a Frank Underwood sense.
It's scary, thinking what McQueen would or could do with the kind of prestige that Eloise Pritchart earned for holding public elections and allowing a hundred systems to voluntarily leave, along with punishing StateSec personnel.
Probably devote even more resources to Bolthole, forget about Operation Thunderbolt entirely and throw Beatrice as her opening punch. Against a RMN Home Fleet savaged by High Ridge and Janacek budgetary cuts and policies.
It's funny that you bring this up, because I'm going to get philosophical with you for a minute here.
I see - will likely always see - Esther McQueen as Eloise Pritchart's dark twin. Her mirror, if you will. Both of them ruthless, both determined to pull Haven out of its centuries-long quagmire, both pragmatic and charismatic...
The difference between them, as I see it (and correct me if I'm wrong here, because I haven't read the earlier books for some time), is that their ambition was directed toward different targets. McQueen's was for herself first, her star nation second. Pritchart's was for her nation first, last, and always, never for herself. She didn't want political power. She had to be persuaded to accept it. And therein lay the difference, because it is those most reluctant to lead who are often the leader their nation needs most.