The Liaden Universe is a series with a somewhat tortured publication history, and Conflict of Honors may be the most wind-tossed book in its number- the second-published book, set a few years before Agent of Change but in no real way a prequel to that book beyond an offhand mention of Val Con's scout career, bundled first with the action-driven Agent of Change and Carpet Diem in Meisha Merlin's omnibus reprint Partners in Necessity in its technically-prequel capacity and now with the "space regencies" Local Custom and Scout's Progress about the romances of Shan and Val Con's respective parents with which it is somewhat closer in tone in Baen's omnibus reprint The Dragon Variation. Phew!
Conflict of Honors was my entry point to the series, one that decidedly hooked me when I picked up Partners in Necessity from the library after reading an online recommendation for the series years ago. It's a pleasantly character-driven story about Priscilla, an outcast witch turned spaceship crew member who hates her cruddy space job and Shan, a thoroughly annoying Gary Stu (yes, he's Captain of his wealthy and powerful though recently diminished aristocratic family's flagship, a Master Trader, a Master Pilot, and a Healer, also his mother was Terran which many in Liaden society find objectionable) who is also, somehow, thoroughly charming because of the warmth which he treats his friends and subordinates.
When Priscilla is unceremoniously left behind by her ship on a backwater world after discovering that the ship is carrying contraband drugs, Shan, who unbeknownst to her has a grievance with the trader and captain of her former ship, senses that she has promise, takes her in, and offers her a job (a clearly fabricated position as a "pet librarian," the ship having a small menagerie of exotic creatures that don't take up as much screen time as one might expect). From there, it's a pretty straightforward and cozy story of Priscilla bonding with the crew, developing her skills and regaining her self-confidence, clashing with her nemesis and her former captain, and ultimately finding both family and home on the Dutiful Passage and starting to make peace with her troubled past.
It's a somewhat rougher book than I always remember it, a little weak maybe in comparison to the later-written Scout's Progress which I just reread where Aelliana has a similar but more skillfully drawn story arc with higher emotional highs and lower emotional lows, but I remain glad it was my entry point into the series because it's exactly the type of book I like. This time around, the flaws were maybe more apparent- the slight "early installment weirdness" of the terms Lord and Lady used for Liaden characters, the dubiousness of both the aphrodisiac subplot and Priscilla's involvement with Lina otherwise (it's ambiguous what Lina actually feels for Priscilla and how much Priscilla is aware that Lina is treating her in her capacity as a Healer during the time that they're sleeping together), the minor characters that run to stereotypes (merchants are fat or exotic, one villain turns out to be mentally ill in an unspecified way and another addicted to a drug).
The romance is also... ambiguous in this one, I think partially because there were fewer templates of how to balance an SF plot and a romance plot well when it was written and partially because the editor was likely wary of scaring off SF readers with too much focus on the romance. This is a setting where casual same-sex relationships seem unexceptional- Priscilla sleeps with a woman on the crew who befriends her for a while before their relationship settles into a non-sexual close friendship; a kiss between them was cut in the original release and restored in the Meisha Merlin release and subsequent editions. However, one of the villains, the second mate on the ship that dumps Priscilla, fits into the predatory lesbian trope fairly squarely, always harassing Priscilla, even seeming to threaten rape- it's made clear, to my reading, that she's bad because she's a terrible person and not because she's interested in women though. The romantic relationship between Shan and Priscilla is a slower-burn one, with Shan explicitly aware that he's her captain and the power dynamics are not great if he were to make advances, and they end in a happy for now place where they're going to try to make it work instead of full lifemates (it's not even explicit that they are in the sense of the setting at this point, though it's implied if the reader has read other stories and knows the signs.)
I find myself wishing as always that Shan and Priscilla didn't take such a back seat to Val Con and Miri from Agent of Change as the series goes on. There was evidently a sequel to this book planned, but it stalled and was scrapped- the authors have posted a partial draft on their website with commentary. Shan shows up again in Alliance of Equals, a book about his relationship with his daughter (from a short-term contract marriage before this book opens) Padi, but Priscilla is only a minor character there. I hope as always that they'll show up more in the future.