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I find, when I re-read, one thing that stays with me is how vibrant and beautiful her narration is. I think the books are still worth reading, but that modern audiences who've been participating in more modern discussions around storytelling would recoil at some of the bits we sort of just accepted as being "normal", as standards for what is "normal" have shifted. The spirit of the books always was forward-thinking, even if she got some stuff wrong.
When Anne McCaffrey did a signing in Chicago when she won her Grand Master award, I had a battered copy of Damia (from her Talents series), and she told me Afra Lyon was her own 2nd favorite character, behind Robinton.
I was on "The New Kitchen Table", which is where her online fandom ended up in the late 90s for a while, but her fandom was HUGE and had already been around for nigh 20 years with Weyrfest and all at Dragon*Con so aside from the one in-person comment (after I waited hours in a line that twined around the bookstore--the only time since that I've seen a bookstore event line that long was for a Harry Potter release), I was very much on the periphery of the fandom vs. those who'd been in it for 20 years already.