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The Expanse #1

袉 锌褉芯泻懈薪械褌褜褋褟 袥械胁褨邪褎邪薪

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芦袉 锌褉芯泻懈薪械褌褜褋褟 袥械胁褨邪褎邪薪禄 鈥� 锌械褉褕懈泄 褉芯屑邪薪 褨蟹 褋械褉褨褩 芦袝泻褋锌邪薪褋褨褟禄 邪胁褌芯褉褋褌胁邪 邪屑械褉懈泻邪薪褋褜泻懈褏 锌懈褋褜屑械薪薪懈泻褨胁-褎邪薪褌邪褋褌褨胁 袛械薪褨械谢邪 袗斜褉邪谐邪屑邪 褨 孝邪褟 肖褉械薪泻邪, 泻芯褌褉褨 锌褉懈斜褉邪谢懈 锌褋械胁写芯薪褨屑 袛卸械泄屑褋 小. 袗. 袣芯褉褨. 袟邪 卸邪薪褉芯屑 褑械泄 褌胁褨褉, 褟泻, 褍褌褨屑, 褨 胁褋褟 锌芯写邪谢褜褕邪 褋械褉褨褟 鈥� 写芯胁芯谢褨 谐邪褉屑芯薪褨泄薪械 锌芯褦写薪邪薪薪褟 芦褌胁械褉写芯褩禄 褎邪薪褌邪褋褌懈泻懈, 泻芯褋屑芯芯锌械褉懈, 谐芯褉芯褉褍, 褋褌懈谢褜薪芯谐芯 薪褍邪褉-写械褌械泻褌懈胁褍 褨 斜芯泄芯胁懈泻邪. 袛卸械泄屑褋 袚芯谢写械薪 鈥� 褏邪褉懈蟹屑邪褌懈褔薪懈泄 褋褌邪褉锌芯屑 谢褜芯写芯胁芯蟹邪 芦袣械薪褌械褉斜械褉褨禄. 袩芯胁械褉褌邪褞褔懈褋褜 褨蟹 胁邪薪褌邪卸械屑 写芯 笑械褉械褉懈, 袚芯谢写械薪 褨蟹 泻芯屑邪薪写芯褞 薪邪褌褉邪锌谢褟褞褌褜 薪邪 锌芯泻懈薪褍褌懈泄 褌褉邪薪褋锌芯褉褌薪懈泻 芦小泻芯锌褍谢褨禄 鈥� 褨 芯锌懈薪褟褞褌褜褋褟 胁 褋邪屑褨褋褨薪褜泻芯屑褍 褑械薪褌褉褨 屑邪褋褕褌邪斜薪芯褩 蟹屑芯胁懈, 褟泻邪 锌芯褉褍褕懈褌褜 褏懈褋褌泻懈泄 锌褨胁褌芯褉邪褋褌邪谢褨褌薪褨泄 锌芯谢褨褌懈褔薪懈泄 斜邪谢邪薪褋 屑褨卸 袟械屑谢械褞 褌邪 袦邪褉褋芯屑. 袛卸芯 袦褨谢谢械褉褍 鈥� 写芯褋胁褨写褔械薪芯屑褍 写械褌械泻褌懈胁芯胁褨 胁褨写写褨谢褍 胁斜懈胁褋褌胁 薪邪 笑械褉械褉褨 鈥� 写芯褉褍褔邪褞褌褜 蟹薪邪泄褌懈 褨 锌芯胁械褉薪褍褌懈 写芯写芯屑褍 袛卸褍谢褨 袦邪芯, 写芯薪褜泻褍 胁谢邪褋薪懈泻邪 屑芯谐褍褌薪褜芯褩 蟹械屑薪芯褩 泻芯褉锌芯褉邪褑褨褩. 孝邪 褖芯泄薪芯 袚芯谢写械薪 芯谐芯谢芯褕褍褦 锌褉芯 褋胁芯褞 蟹薪邪褏褨写泻褍 锌械褉械写 褍褋褨褦褞 小芯薪褟褔薪芯褞 褋懈褋褌械屑芯褞, 笑械褉械褉褍 芯褏芯锌谢褞褞褌褜 蟹邪胁芯褉褍褕械薪薪褟. 袙褋褨 胁芯谢褨褞褌褜 蟹邪斜褍褌懈 锌褉芯 锌芯褕褍泻懈 写褨胁褔懈薪懈 鈥� 泻褉褨屑 褋邪屑芯谐芯 袦褨谢谢械褉邪. 袊褩 芯褋褌邪薪薪褨泄 褉械泄褋 鈥� 泻芯褉邪斜械谢褜 芦小泻芯锌褍谢褨禄. 袚芯谢写械薪褍 褌邪 袦褨谢谢械褉褍 写芯胁械写械褌褜褋褟 锌褉芯泄褌懈 薪邪写 锌褉褨褉胁芯褞, 邪斜懈 褉芯蟹锌谢褍褌邪褌懈 泻谢褍斜芯泻 褨薪褌褉懈谐, 胁 褟泻芯屑褍 锌械褉械锌谢械谢懈褋褟 褍褉褟写懈, 泻芯褉锌芯褉邪褑褨褩, 锌芯胁褋褌邪薪褑褨-锌芯褟褋邪薪懈 褌邪 锌褉邪写邪胁薪褟 蟹邪谐褉芯蟹邪, 泻芯褌褉邪 褔懈谐邪谢邪 薪邪 谢褞写褋褌胁芯 蟹邪写芯胁谐芯 写芯 泄芯谐芯 锌芯褟胁懈.

480 pages, Hardcover

First published June 2, 2011

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James S.A. Corey

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 20,319 reviews
Profile Image for Joel.
584 reviews1,910 followers
September 16, 2011
I complained in my review of that the gee-whiz mechanics of space opera can't really sustain a 600-page narrative. It turns out I was perhaps incorrect: most of the lengthy examples I've sampled in the sub-genre (Alastair Reynolds, Iain M. Banks) are of the "dark and gritty" variety, grim, nihilistic visions of the future starring amoral asshole protagonists who are impossible to sympathize with. Even with a bunch of cool ideas on display, spending 700 pages in these books is exhausting. Inevitably, I like them for about 400 pages and then I just... get tired.

But this book... this is the space opera I want to read. This book has the spirit of the genre's early days, characters who still marvel at the impossible immensity of the stars, but it isn't a pastiche or a throwback -- it's a natural evolution, and a remarkably satisfying one. The closest analogue I can think of is the oft-overpraised television show Firefly. Say what you will about the annoyingly zealous fanbase (or don't, you don't need the hate email); that show really did almost everything right in translating space opera to the modern age. The characters are complex, they operate in a world that is more grey than black & white, but each also has a clear moral center, so we know why they do the things they do, even when they are terrible things. You can make space opera (or epic fantasy or whatever) that is "dark" and "gritty" and still fun to read, with characters that are fun to read about. Because why would you want to explore the stars with assholes?

I'm having some trouble locking the tractor beam on my point here, but it basically comes down to this: if you want me to invest in your lengthy space epic, you better give me something more to care about than magic space technology macguffin crap, because I will get sick of that. This book gave me cool ideas and everything else: archetypal characters that nevertheless manage to be compelling and sympathetic, interesting and very well thought out politics and economics, constant narrative momentum without sacrificing character... It's the most fun I've had reading sci-fi in a long time.

I should have expected nothing less of Daniel Abraham, who is one-half of the pseudonymous James S.A. Corey; earlier this year, I gushed about the way he was able to do basically all the same stuff within the confines of the epic fantasy genre. And there is so much to like about the premise, just on the face of it: it's a few hundred years from now. Humanity has colonized Mars and invented an engine that allows fairly speedy travel, to a point. Our solar system has been colonized, with outposts on the moons of Saturn and spread across the asteroid belts, but we've gone no further because, come on, space is freaking huge and what are the chances we're going to invent warp drive and quickly stumble across the other needles in the galactic haystack? Besides, we've got enough to keep ourselves busy: colonizing space hasn't exactly united humanity, and Earth, Mars and the Outer Planets Alliance operate under an uneasy truce, with heavy prejudices on all sides.

This stuff is very well thought out. People in the outer planets have lived for generations free from the constraints of heavy gravity, and have started to differ physically from Earthers. Language and culture have shifted too. This makes racism easier. Meanwhile the sheer logistical challenges of sustaining life on dead rocks (from mining interstellar ice to diets of food manufactured from algae) mean the "Belters" are still beholden to their terrestrial cousins.

The plot is a potboiler, effectively combining space action with a noir murder mystery (the two storylines intertwined in chapters that alternate between two POV characters). The characters are, like I said, broad types in some ways, but you can do broad types very well; a stock character can still be well rounded and compelling. This book manages to star both a world-weary detective and an idealistic space captain (with a smart-mouthed love interest and some wise-cracking ship's crew in the background) and not feel like a retread, to give the characters tough moral choices (and sometimes they make the wrong ones), without turning them into unrepentant sociopaths. It goes back to what I was saying many, many paragraphs ago about honoring conventions while expanding upon them.

I don't know if I am communicating this very well, but this book is all of that and also just impossible to stop reading. It's also funny without trying too hard, and thoughtful without being overly constructed or preachy. It's the book I have been looking for every time I picked up a space epic. I just didn't know until I found it.
Profile Image for Emily (Books with Emily Fox on Youtube).
627 reviews69.5k followers
August 24, 2020
(2.5) Need to watch the tv show because damn, I'm disappointed.
_______________________

The moon itself - Phoebe - filled the frame, turning slowly to show all sides like a prostitute at a cheap brothel.

"But you did this for what?.."
Profile Image for Felicia.
Author听46 books128k followers
November 29, 2011
I've been gorking out on Urban Fantasy and Romance lately, so mixing it with a FANTASTIC Space Opera was JUST what I needed!

I loved this book because in a lot of ways it humanized a BIG SF world in a way that is normally tough. I cared about the characters, I yelled at them a lot, and I enjoyed every minute! It felt modern and current, and created a really believable world that I wanted to live in and learn about. The politics of Earth vs Mars vs the Fringers, the mystery and vaguely noir-ish subplot...really REALLY good. I recommend to anyone who enjoys Sci-Fi!

And I guess it's part of a future trilogy? Yum!

Profile Image for Kemper.
1,390 reviews7,495 followers
February 10, 2017
I got nobody to blame but myself for this鈥�.

I鈥檝e had a long-standing policy that I will not read an unfinished sci-fi/fantasy series because I spent over a decade waiting for a certain master of horror to get off his ass and finish what he started. Plus, I have no urge to join the ranks of fans of other fantasy writers who seem to spend more time coming up with excuses and side projects rather than producing new books to finish their on-going series.

Ignorance isn鈥檛 a good defense, but it鈥檚 all I can claim. I picked this up on a whim after hearing it mentioned on the Incomparable podcast. I was a little leery when I saw it was almost 600 pages, but I didn鈥檛 bother looking into exactly what I had gotten myself into until I started the book That鈥檚 when I freaked the hell out:

鈥�9 novels?!? 9 goddamn novels and they鈥檙e all this long? Holy shit! Only 5 have been released? It鈥檚 an unfinished series?? IT鈥橲 AN UNFINISHED SERIES! Oh, sweet jebus what have I done? And holy shit snacks they鈥檝e been releasing off-shoot novels! ARGGHHH!! This is a nightmare鈥�. OK, calm down. Let鈥檚 see, there鈥檚 actually two guys writing it under one pen name. Two guys can keep each other focused and moving forward. They鈥檝e been releasing books like clockwork and have a schedule to bring it home. That鈥檚 good news. And these off-shoots are Kindle shorts so it looks like they鈥檙e really just true extras and not them filling their pockets while dawdling on the main series. Oh, and the Syfy network is doing That could be cool. Maybe this isn鈥檛 so bad after all. Wait, one of the authors also works as an assistant to鈥�.Uh oh. Well, maybe he鈥檚 learned what NOT to do when you鈥檙e working on a series鈥r maybe I鈥榣l end up not liking it very much and can just stop here.鈥�

No such luck. Damn it. I鈥檓 a sucker for the kind of sci-fi where even though they鈥檙e in space the characters have dirt under their nails and skinned knuckles rather than lounging around in pristine uniforms on ships that look like corporate cube farms. I鈥檓 also much more of a believer in the idea that if humanity does make it to other worlds that we鈥檒l be dragging all our collective baggage out there with us rather than being explorers from a utopian society. Plus, I鈥檓 a big mystery fan and one of the main characters is a burned out space detective with a cynical outlook. And I also like Oh, yeah. I鈥檓 in.

I particularly liked the push/pull between the two main characters. Holden is an idealist who thinks that people will make good collective choices as long as they鈥檙e told the truth, and that contrasts well with Miller鈥檚 bleak outlook that people are stupid sheep. Put those two guys in a society built out among our solar system鈥檚 asteroid belt that is about to go to war with Earth and Mars as they try to unravel the conspiracy behind it, and you鈥檝e got yourself a pretty damn compelling sci-fi story.

I still kinda feel like a rube though鈥�.

Update 2/7/17 - You can tell from the original review I posted that I had a lot of misgivings about starting an unfinished series back when I first read this. A few years later after re-reading it I'm happy to report that it all worked out for the best. The authors have stuck to their schedule and delivered a book a year since they started, and the entires series has become one of my favorite sci-fi things ever. I also got a bonus in a pretty damn good TV series based on the show since then which just started it's second season. So this gamble has paid off pretty well so far.
Profile Image for Petrik.
763 reviews58.6k followers
March 22, 2020
Leviathan Wakes was so good; a character-driven space-opera that combines sci-fi, noir, mystery, and a slice of horror into one.

I鈥檝e watched only the first season and a few episodes of the second season, but it was enough to make me want to read all the available books in the series first before continuing with the TV series again. Seriously, amazing movies/TV adaptations boost book sales exponentially more than anything else in the world, and I do believe that The Expanse by James S. A. Corey has received this benefit. Here鈥檚 one proof, below is a picture of my collection of the series which I bought just because of what I鈥檝e watched so far.



Isn鈥檛 it gorgeous? Can we also give standing applause to James S. A. Corey for the name of each respective book title of this series? It鈥檚 hands down some of the coolest book titles I鈥檝e come across so far.

Leviathan Wakes is the first installment in The Expanse nine-book series by James S. A. Corey; a duo comprised of Daniel Abraham鈥攖he author of The Long Price Quartet and The Dagger and the Coin series鈥攁nd Ty Franck. Both Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck are authors who have worked closely with George R. R. Martin, and I think the writing is slightly reminiscent of Martin鈥檚 writing style.

The story in Leviathan Wakes follows two different main characters, Jim Holden and Detective Miller. When Jim and his crew stumble upon a derelict ship, the Scopuli, they find themselves in a possession of a dangerous secret. Meanwhile, Miller is looking for a girl in a system of billions, and it eventually leads to the Scopuli as well. The story starts slow and interesting enough for both storylines but once their story intertwines, I was completely hooked. Due to having watched the majority of the plotline in the first book, I have to admit that there weren鈥檛 a lot of surprises left for me here. However, I鈥檓 surprised that the badass lady Avasarala鈥攎y favorite character in the TV show so far鈥攄idn鈥檛 even appear at all in Leviathan Wakes, not even mentioned. Also, Amos in the TV show and in the book felt like a completely different person! But here鈥檚 the thing, despite knowing the storylines already, I still have a wonderful time reading this book. I鈥檝e been craving for a character-driven space-opera series to read for a while now, and Leviathan Wakes fits the bill.

鈥淭he massive radiation exposure had failed to give him superpowers.鈥�


The characterizations and the banter between Holden and Miller are, in my opinion, the two main driving strength of the narrative. Seeing the chemistry鈥攕imilarities and contrasts included鈥攂etween the two characters was incredibly engaging. As Corey has mentioned, Holden and Miller have an opposite view in the way information should be spread out. Holden, as an idealist, believes that all information should be given to everyone. Miller, on the other hand, is a nihilist that believes information must be controlled carefully. I think the cooperation and the clash between these two main characters made the plot progression so much more engaging than I expected. I loved both storylines and internalizations; although Miller's story took a while for me to get into, I ended up feeling invested in his journey as much as I did for Holden鈥檚 ever since their story intertwines with each other. Corey鈥檚 characterization for Holden and Miller was so spot-on, and I feel that their personality excels more in the book than the TV adaptation; the nuances in their characterizations were unfound on the TV show.

鈥淔irst off, get your shit together. Panic doesn鈥檛 help. It never helps. Deep breaths, figure this out, make the right moves. Fear is the mind-killer. Ha. Geek.鈥�


There are disadvantages that came from having watched the TV series first, though; the intriguing aspect of the mystery was lost on me. However, there are also advantages. I did have some difficulty imagining some scenes and settings through the text provided, and fortunately, my beforehand experience with the TV show was able to conjure the visual imagery wanted. Do note, though, that out of my favorite genres鈥攆antasy, sci-fi, and historical fiction鈥擨 personally have more trouble with visualizing when I鈥檓 reading sci-fi compared to the other two.

Leviathan Wakes is a great start to a big sci-fi series which I鈥檓 hoping I鈥檒l enjoy more and more as I progress through it. Despite the large backdrops and settings, I loved how Corey prioritized the characters and their actions, more than anything else, to take the central stage. For now, I plan to make my way through each book in the series monthly. I鈥檓 hoping that the final book of the series will, at least, have an official publication date by the time I caught up.

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Profile Image for mark monday.
1,837 reviews6,057 followers
September 25, 2011
EH? EH! this so-called space opera is anything but. no sense of wonder, no sense of truly divergent civilizations, no galactic span. and a clear lack of operatic emotions on display as well. perhaps this is due to the characterization, which is rote, uninteresting, and badly developed, with sub-par Firefly-style dialogue along for the ride. perhaps it is also due to the subject matter, which is confined to purely in-system politics between Earth and Mars (the two reigning superpowers) and the asteroid colonies (plucky upstarts, proletariat underdogs, and possible terrorists)... the scope here just seems so EH WHO CARES. there is a nuts-and-bolts approach to the technology that has a glimmer of hard science to it, but this is not a hard science fiction novel by far. overall, it is not terribly written per se - it just is the very definition of flat and uninspiring. maybe i've been too spoiled by the likes of Iain M. Banks, Vernor Vinge, Peter Hamilton, and now Alastair Reynolds; i am unable to be impressed by something that is so lacking in genuine excitement or genuinely complex world-building. there was nothing at stake for me and my mind was definitely not blown. each time i re-opened this novel, it was like buying a first class ticket to snoozeville. in the end, i gave up on page 162 - and i want those hours back!
Profile Image for Mario the lone bookwolf.
805 reviews5,157 followers
November 27, 2022
Certainly one of the best space operas ever written

Predestined to be made a major TV series
This is something special for the sci fi genre, because it麓s one of the first big, new sci fi worlds that got transformed into a magnificent TV series. There are so many other jewels waiting to be adapted, in the best case with enough time to put all the details from the books into the series. It reminds me of Game of Thrones too, where there are these two worlds of the books and the series with their own fandoms, fan wars, and all the beef, and the books are always much better, thank you!

Together they rise
I don麓t know if one author alone would have produced something of this complexity and scale. This just has everything, escalating, different points of view with known and new characters, actual effects of happenings from prior parts of the series, cliffhanger over cliffhanger, great character design, piles of Sci-Fi elements, a uniting element that gets more and more complex over the time, etc.

Create more of this stuff, the books are all already there for decades!
Now, thanks to enough computational power, maybe soon all my beloved Sci-Fi series may come alive on the screen, walking in the green footprints of Titans like Babylon 5, Star Trek, and Dr. Who, making the 21 first century the age of the ultimate Sci-Fi nerdgasm.

Think about amazon whatever you want, but praise the founders' decision
Thank you so much, Jeff Bezos, for both saving this series and stealing my lifetime with incentives to buy too much useless stuff and wasting my time binge-watching a sci fi series. Bezos has a huge interest in asteroid mining and beliefs that it麓s more important to first build a full production line than to bring all equipment from earth, which I deem the best approach too. Loud boos for Mars and planetary colonialization, that麓s the second step after industrialized production. And yes, I know, there is much justified criticism of amazon, but that isn麓t a topic in this review (that shouldn麓t be deleted from a social cataloging site belonging to amazon), so instead something unrealistically positive as a distraction.

Maybe capitalism one day turns out not to be that bad in hindsight
Because, who knows, maybe we wouldn麓t have timely built enough space bases without our classic evil, capitalistic system. And were thereby gone the way of the dodo bird instead in the case of future catastrophes and cataclysmic events. Imagine no species would have brought this human madness into space, that would have been a loss for, ahem, well just for us and a win for any other sentient, peaceful species, because I simply love to compare us with any kind of evil Sci-Fi empire.

The future in space might be a repeat of world history
And I mean, we wouldn麓t start colonizing and exploiting other worlds again or go to war with an alien species who is interested in resources too or something. Again again. Or at least, this time not against our own species and that麓s something close to a socioevolutionary progress. Just kill aliens, not humans.

Tropes show how literature is conceived and which mixture of elements makes works and genres unique:
Profile Image for Jeffrey Keeten.
Author听6 books251k followers
January 7, 2020
鈥漌ay I see it, there鈥檚 three ways this can go,鈥� Miller said. 鈥淥ne, we find your ship still in dock, get the meds we need, and maybe we live. Two, we try to get to the ship, and along the way we run into a bunch of mafia thugs. Die gloriously in a hail of bullets. Three, we sit here and leak out of our eyes and assholes.鈥�



Well, really, the story begins when some alien species shoot a payload of virus at Earth and misses. This virus is capable of turning the human race into piles of nasty, smelly biosolids. Luckily for Earth, this contagion from space gets caught in Saturn鈥檚 rings which keeps it from ever reaching its intended destination.

Holden is the second in command of an iceberg hauler. When he sees his ship Canterbury blown into dust particles by pirates, while the ship was trying to respond to an SOS, his world is suddenly expanded and contracted. Expanded by the beginning of a conflict that will spread across the known universe, but his world has also contracted down to the confining corridors of the small ship that he and his remaining crew members are trying to keep afloat.

The universal conflict might be more than a little bit Holden鈥檚 fault. He broadcasts out to the world the existence of incriminating evidence that Mars might have had something to do with the pirates. The writers behind the name James S. A. Corey might be making a point about the misuse of disseminating wrong information on the internet. How many people believe it even when it doesn鈥檛 make sense?

This section of the universe is shared between Earth, Mars, and what are called the Belters. Belters are people born in the asteroid belt. The Belters are generally taller, fitter, and tend to bastardize language much the same way as immigrants to America bastardized English. I kind of think of Holden as Gavrilo Princip, the man that touched off WW1 by assassinating Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Holden meant well; to him information is meant to be shared so that it can be analyzed and expounded upon. People unfortunately jump to conclusions without examining the evidence too closely, especially when the potential for war has been brewing for some time. The major powers in the universe are just looking for the right catalyst to start a war. Holden, inadvertently, provided the match.

鈥漈he moral complexity of the situation had grown past his ability to process it.鈥�

So there is some lethal goo out there trapped in the rings of Saturn. Knowing humans to be the 鈥渃urious monkeys鈥� that they are... what do you think happens next? Yeah, they just can鈥檛 help poking a stick at it.

Things go from bad to worse in a hurry.

Vomit zombies...need I say more?

Okay, maybe just a bit more because there are more stages to this thing.

鈥滱 flock of softball-sized spiderlike things crawled through the corridor, leaving a slick sheen of glowing slime behind them. It wasn鈥檛 until he paused to knock one off the cart that he recognized them as severed hands, the trailing wrist bones charred black and remade. Part of his mind was screaming, but it was a distant one and easy to ignore.鈥�

*SHUDDER*

As a counterweight to Holden is the cop Miller. He sees the world through rose murky colored glasses. He has seen the worst of people, so he doesn鈥檛 need to speculate about what people are capable of. He is on the case of a missing rich girl, and even after he is fired from his job, he continues to hunt for her. It turns out she is connected with the OPA, a Belter resistance group, and also she is somehow mixed up with the goo from space.

Miller hooks up with Holden and his crew, but it is an uneasy alliance. Holden鈥檚 righteousness and Miller鈥檚 cynicism mix like oil and water, but actually with the universe hanging in the balance their differing views create a middle which is generally where the right answers can be found.

So pull up a bowl of fungal curds and a cup of something that tastes close to coffee and have a blast watching the crew of the Rocinante cartwheel across the universe barely surviving one disaster after another as they do everything they can to stay alive and save the world.

The SyFy Channel has just launched a new series called Expanse that is based on the universe created by Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck in this series of books. I haven鈥檛 watched the episodes yet because I really wanted to read the first book before watching any part of the TV series. If I have a complaint about the book, it is that it does feel a bit bloated, but the fact that it is unapologetically calling itself a space opera I feel kind of snarky even broaching the subject. The world building is fascinating, and from what I have read, the books will continue to add pieces to this world as the book series progresses. I have plans to read at least two more.

One last little tidbit from Miller which I found rather funny as I鈥檓 holding this 16 pound trade paperback novel in my hands: 鈥漈he OPA man, Anderson Dawes, was sitting on a cloth folding chair outside Miller鈥檚 hole, reading a book. It was a real book--onionskin pages bound in what might have been actual leather. Miller had seen pictures of them before; the idea of that much weight for a single megabyte of data struck him as decadent.鈥�

I just blew you a raspberry Miller.

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Profile Image for Baba.
3,952 reviews1,406 followers
August 23, 2023
The Expanse - 1: (reread after just 28 months!) I sill don't even know where to begin with this planets' spanning space opera set in a deeply detailed future, multiple location reality where man is split into three co-dependant but opposing civilisations; there's Earth, Luna and the inner planets between Earth and the Sun; there's Mars, its colonies and numerous outposts; and between these powerhouses are the space resident Belters who live, and more so work all over the Asteroid belt, on some of the asteroids, space stations and even ships!

This volume is set mostly in Belter space. Miller is a grizzled old-timer Belter detective who is handed a semi-off the books case to retrieve a very important Earth-man's daughter. Earth-man Jim Holden, Belter Naomi, Martian Alex and Earth-man Amos are working in the Belt when an act of gross piracy, leaves them marooned together in space and wanted or suspected by all three civilisations. Ensuing events sees them get caught in a cycle of space and space base violence, taking them and us readers into a galaxy-wide conspiracy thriller, where no-one really knows what's going on; Jim and his crew are bizarrely at the centre of it all, just for being in the wrong place at the wrong time... erm, time and time again!

This book ticks many boxes. A future with very diverse multicultural populations. An iconic spaceship. This book ticks many boxes. A future with very diverse multicultural populations. An iconic spaceship. A detective with a hat, that likes a drink. A class of almost disposable people who do the key work in the Belt, the Belters. An understanding that corporations would be as powerful as galactic coalitions in the future. A complex, compelling and pretty innovative conspiracy. Space battles! Space stations! Low-key descriptive passages. Almost zero conventional romantic sub-plot (very sub-plot, thank God!). Great dialogue. Easy to read and accessible not-too long chapters' format.

As with all great sci-fi, the nature, characteristics, history, science etc of this book, set mostly in the Asteroid Belt is only revealed through the lives of our protagonists. The story is told almost entirely from the perspectives of Detective Miller and Captain Jim Holden. What lifts this book up to great reading status is the multi-faceted and compelling conspiracy thriller that runs through it, a conspiracy that may run through the entire Solar System... . In a few words, this is a truly compelling and far-reaching space-opera that manages to be entirely action and adventure led, yet remains solidly a sci-fi epic! The only negative for me, was that I happened to watch the TV show first (which I love, so bought these books), which I felt may have detracted me, from just how good this book is/was for me? 9 out of 12. A stonking Four Star read!, so much so that I felt that 650+ pages wasn't enough, and have now read it again 28 months later!

2023 and 2021 read
Profile Image for Anne.
4,604 reviews70.6k followers
May 17, 2025
4.5 stars
Five members of the Canterbury's crew leave to respond to a distress signal on the transport vessel, Scopulia. It's abandoned when they get there but before they can get back to their ship they are witness to the attack and destruction of the ice hauler by an unknown ship.
After a bit of Scooby-Dooing, they realize that the distress signal was Martian. Jim Holden is the officer in charge and he makes the fateful decision to broadcast that information across the universe, setting cataclysmic events in motion that will affect the people of Earth, Mars, & the Belt.

description

Meanwhile, Joe Miller works for a private security that provides a sort of police force at Cerces Station (on the asteroid belt) and is volunteered by his boss to track down Julie Mao, the missing daughter of a wealthy tycoon. She has disowned her family and was working for a group of rebels known as the OPA, but has recently disappeared. As Miller learns more about her, he develops feelings for this young woman who gave up everything to fight for the rights of Belters.
She becomes almost an alter ego in his mind that speaks to him and drives him to keep searching for her even after he has been ordered to let her case go.

description

And that's just the bare basics of the story.
This is a fully realized sci-fi world with layers upon layers of complex plotlines and rich characters. I had a feeling when I was done that I just scratched the surface of James Corey's tale, and I am looking forward to listening to Jefferson Mays narrate the rest of the books for me.

description

If you dig sci-fi, you'll dig this.
And if you liked The Expanse television show, you should check out the amazing books that spawned the series.
Highly Recommended.
Profile Image for Daniel B..
Author听3 books34.1k followers
February 28, 2020
Scifi is meant to awe its readers while expanding their minds. Leviathan Wakes accomplished both while also incorporating many elements from other genres almost entirely successfully. I am beginning to believe more and more due to stories like this that the best days of scifi are not dead. Yes, Asimov is no longer crafting his nearly perfect stories, but the genre itself continues to grow and experiment. That kind of experimentation has given us this scifi epic and I am extremely happy to experience this story.

Full Review Here:
Profile Image for J.L.   Sutton.
666 reviews1,178 followers
April 14, 2022
鈥淲hat kind of half-assed apocalypse are they running down there?鈥� Amos said. 鈥淕ive 鈥檈m a break. It鈥檚 their first.鈥�

James S A Corey,

I enjoyed the story and the world (Mars, the asteroid belt between Earth and Mars, Earth, various mining stations) depicted in Leviathan Wakes. The setting and overall atmosphere of this near-future thriller has a noir feel to it (which becomes more evident with the appearance of Detective Miller and his investigation into the missing Julia Mao). At times, you feel like you're reading a pulp crime detective novel in the spirit of Raymond Chandler, but Leviathan Wakes does more than answer questions about who done it (although who and what things happen become part of the ongoing drive of the plot). As in so much of really good science fiction, the question of what it means to be human and the moral implications of asking and acting on assumptions of that question are explored. Nothing seems forced, though. It just seems to happen in the natural progression of the story. The characters are what makes this a strong read, though. None of them are either totally good or bad or think in black and white. 4.25 stars


description

Met James S.A. Corey (Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck) at a GenCon writers' event. Fun to meet them and chat about their books for a minute or two!
Profile Image for Matthew.
1,221 reviews10.1k followers
January 21, 2020
Welcome to 2020! My first book finished this year (kind of cheating since I started it in 2019)

This book is very epic . . . and it is only the beginning.

Leviathan Wakes is book one of The Expanse series. I have seen it described as a space opera. I was not quite sure the definition of space opera - although I have seen it used many times and even read a book with that title. So, I decided to use the ol' Google machine on my internet device and this is what I came up with:

From Oxford:

"NOUN

informal听North American

A novel, film, or television programme set in outer space, typically of a simplistic and melodramatic nature."


This definion is sort of what I was thinking, but I am a bit surprised that it has kind of a negative connotation. So, while it is a novel and series set in space and it is a bit melodramatic, I would not call it a space opera in the negative! It is far from simplistic, with complex relationships and intricate storylines. Overall, a very positive experience.

My only concern with it was that it was a bit long, dragged on at points, and some plot points took longer than I wanted to beginning fleshing out. I am glad I read this one on audio, because I think it may have been difficult to stay interested if it was a physical copy. Now that I am into it, however, I am looking forward to what comes next.

So far, this seems like a book and series that any and every sci-fi fan should try.
Profile Image for carol. .
1,729 reviews9,605 followers
August 4, 2013
Leviathan Wakes broke my reading slump! Listlessly slogging my way through various reads--a couple of which came highly recommended--I was starting to wonder if it I had lost my book love. Then I picked this up for a Book o' the Month read. Expecting a detail dense sci-fi, within the first few pages I found myself hooked, and by page 100, thoroughly reeled in by this hefty genre mash-up. Space opera? Perhaps. Horror? Maybe. Military? Sort of. Mystery in space? Yes, definitely. And if by the end it reminded me a little of The Rook and The Gone-Away World, that's not a negative comparison. All of them have some interesting philosophical underpinnings combined with genre mash-up, a light mystery-driven plot and a nice side of humor.

"Mariner Valley had been settled by East Indians, Chinese and a small contingent of Texans. Apparently the drawl was viral. They all had it now."

Oddly, I seem to be on an unintentional run of books created by collaborators, and in some cases it works well (), and in some, not so much. Although there's a few rough spots here--and I'd have to agree with a number of reviewers that pinpoint the ending as displeasing--it generally works very well. I went looking for some background on the collaboration, and the duo offered up a few thoughts on and in an appealing three-part Youtube video interview with author :

Initially, a fragmented viewpoint had trouble luring me in, but once the authors settled down for an exchange of viewpoints between Holden, an "executive officer" on an ice hauling deep-space freighter of outcasts, and Detective Miller, a world-weary member of an asteroid peace-keeping force, it was suddenly became completely absorbing. The culture felt at once familiar with generational differences between deep spacers who grow up on various asteroids and moons, and those that grow up on the more developed Earth and Martian colonies. The writers add a twist by including some physical differences that occur between Earth-gravity and deep-space gravity peoples, and further enlarge upon it by including economic and political angles that make the culture-building feel real. If the lead characters seem a bit stereotypical, it is because the authors intended them to be more archetypical. The genius is in their interactions, with the world-weary detective and his 'realistic' problem-solving contrasting with the outsider hero and his optimistic one. Suddenly 'right' and 'wrong' aren't so clear.

"The circle of life on Ceres was so small you could see the curve. He liked it that way."


I admire the writers' goal of a composition that addresses the emotion of the story, and for wanting to write an engaging style that doesn't depend on artificial cliffhangers (Psst! Modern UF and YA--we're talking about you). One reason I don't spend much time in deep-space sci-fi is the tendency to focus on world and tech-building at the expense of character and plot. Either that, or it all becomes a set-up for a giant philosophical thought experiment. Had I known from the beginning about the authors' intentions, I might have went into it with higher expectations of enjoyment.

"We鈥檙e sentimentalists. We care whether the soul-crushed cop finds redemption. We care whether the quixotic holy fool of a captain overcomes his own failings in time to get the girl. And we expect you to care too. The risk we take is that you might not, and if you don鈥檛, there鈥檚 no defense against the failure on our part. But you know what? We think it鈥檚 worth it anyway."

It was worth it.

Four deep-space stars.


Cross posted at
Profile Image for Jessica 鉂� 鉃� Silverbow 鉃� 鉂� .
1,290 reviews8,959 followers
March 29, 2018
Reviewed by:

Here's another Jessica quirk: I LOVE sci-fi on screen, but I rarely like reading it. I have no idea why. Some things just are.

BUT. I binge-watched last week, and it was good enough that it made me curious. There were no giant-insects-as-aliens, no surplus of tech gobbledygook, and no discernible artificial intelligence (the things that make me avoid sci-fi literature, even though I can usually handle the movie version), and what there was was mysteriously mysterious, plus, you know, SPACE, so pretty great, IMO.

The story revolves around two male MCs, Jim Holden, the XO of the ice-hauling freighter Canterbury, and Joe Miller, a washed-up, "prototypical Noir dectective" (description stolen from Mike , b/c it's darn near perfect, and I didn't want to bother coming up with my own lesser version).

Holden is a thirty-ish bright-eyed idealist whose naivete borders on unbelievable, given his dishonorable discharge from the UN Navy (for punching a superior officer who needed to be punched, if I remember correctly) amongst other things. He's also rather immature about relationships, convincing himself that he's in love with every female he lusts after. His actions would've been more consistent with someone ten years younger, but then he wouldn't have the experience to land his XO gig, so what are you going to do?

Miller . . . is a hot tepid mess. He's in his mid-fifties, divorced in what feels like the recent past, but in reality is probably going on a decade ago, and unable to move on. He's a drunk. He moves through life in a contradictory haze of apathy and regret. Then, when he's forced to face a personal truth that he's thus far insulated himself from, he latches on to his last assignment: a retrieval job for the rich parents of a young woman who has turned her back on her upbringing to champion the Belters, the dregs and underdogs of her world.

During his detecting, Miller becomes infatuated with the Earthen-turned-Belter freedom fighter. He's obsessed with finding her, convincing himself that if he can save Juliette Andromeda Mao, all of life's disappointments and failures will be worth it.

It's another stretch, or at least it was for me, but I'm inexperienced in all things Noir, so maybe that's my ignorance talking.

Regardless, both Holden's idealism and Miller's transference were stretches that I was willing and able to accommodate, in part b/c of the character growth both MCs went through from start to finish.

At first, I straight-up didn't like Holden. I thought he was an idiot, who recklessly made decisions that had consequences he couldn't begin to understand, and a manwhore who justified his manwhoring by believing his was in lurrrrve. Every, single time. *rolls eyes*

But just as I was about to write him off, someone schooled him about a little thing called REALITY, and that in conjunction with several other hard-earned lessons he eventually took to heart, he turned into someone I could admire. He was no longer an unrealistic dreamer, he was an uncorruptible man who stood by the principles that guided every aspect of his life.

Miller . . . damn near broke my heart.

The only other thing I'll say about him is that

Something readers coming to LEVIATHAN WAKES post-Syfy series should know is that Chrisjen Avasarala doesn't show up until book 2, CALIBAN'S WAR. The absence of any female POVs makes this a very male-driven story, but I've been assured that problem (if you see that as a problem) is resolved in the later installments. CALIBAN'S WAR introduces not only Chrisjen Avasarala, but also a "space Brienne with power armor." (<------description also courtesy of Mike .)

*visions of Aeryn Sun dance in my head*

description

The first half of the book is mostly repeat, if you've watched the series, but I knew that going into it, and when I hit new material at the midway point, it took off. So that's also important to know: season one of the Syfy series doesn't cover the entire first book, only half of it.

So maybe it's consistently like this throughout the book for people who read LEVIATHAN WAKES prior to watching THE EXPANSE, but at around 60%, revelation upon revelation starting being revealed, and in a holy-crap-that's-so-cool or holy-crap-WTF?! kind of way, not an overwhelming bombardment of information kind of way.

I plowed through it, resenting every moment I had to spend away from it, and when I finally got to the ending, it was perfect. There were enough unanswered questions to keep me eager to read the next installment, while still having sufficient closure to be satisfying. And the closure allowed me to appreciate Corey's wry humor in a way I probably missed in earlier parts of the book, b/c too desperate to find out WHAT IS HAPPENING to pay attention to silly things like the subtleties of wry humor. Fred Johnson's reference to himself as a "marriage counselor" even made laugh out loud.

Verdict: LEVIATHAN WAKES by James S. A. Corey is sci-fi enough to satisfy the hardcore fans of the genre without being overwhelming to the rest of us who just kinda like space and the idea of intelligent life in the universe. This mystery is just beginning to unravel and I will definitely be reading CALIBAN'S WAR to find out what happens next. Highly recommended.

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Profile Image for Lisa of Troy.
878 reviews7,402 followers
August 20, 2024
Sorry, Jeff Bezos, Leviathan Wakes is dull

Someone purchased The Expanse Series as a gift for me because I love Dune and Game of Thrones; however, Leviathan Wakes is not even in the same league as these other books (although I do appreciate book gifts).

This book doesn鈥檛 have the great, mind-altering quotes of Dune or Game of Thrones. For the life of me, I couldn鈥檛 tell the difference between Miller and Havelock, and the audiobook was not a full cast which was disappointing because it would have helped me to differentiate between the characters.

The book felt slow-paced, and I didn鈥檛 care about any of the characters. There isn鈥檛 a very well-developed character arc, and there also is very little backstory on the characters.

I also wanted to feel something鈥擨 want to be moved. In Dune and Game of Thrones, you spend a lot of time hearing the characters鈥� thoughts. Not so in Leviathan Wakes.

Although I typically like short sentences, the technique was overused. The prose would have benefited from a varied sentence structure.

Overall, this book was such a chore to pick up each and every time, and the twist-ending was ridiculous.

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Profile Image for Christina Loeffler.
148 reviews17.2k followers
August 27, 2018
4, turns out husbands CAN be right sometimes stars!!!

This review along with a recipe for Mariner Valley skillet lasagna is now featured on my blog Recipe & a Read:

So lets start this one off with the truth: I'm not a sci-fi fan. I don't dislike sci-fi but I have a hard time with it and it tends to get bogged down for me. But, that's neither here nor there because I thoroughly enjoyed this book! Let us begin:

A long time ago, in a galaxy far, fa....nope, wrong science fiction story. In round about 200 years, humans have colonized the solar system. Our major players are Earth, Mars and the "Belt" (i.e. the stations located in the asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter). We've also got the OPA (Outer Planets Alliance) to contend with as well. The OPA is a group of loosely affiliated members fighting for the rights of those who inhabit the belt - known ever so cleverly as "belters".

"Too many dots," Miller said. "Not enough lines."

This baby starts of with a serious bang with our prologue introducing us to Julie. Julie and her crew have been taken captive and she's left alone in a dark locker for days on end. When her sanity begins to wane she breaks herself out to find an abandoned ship around her. When she does finally locate the crew, it's a ghastly sight to say the absolute least. This is where our journey begins - what happened to Julie? Where is she now? Why is the ship she was on sending out an emergency signal? Enter James 'the loudest mouth in the solar system' Holden, the XO of the ice miner ship the Canterbury. His ship has picked up the previously mentioned emergency signal.

The law of the solar system was unequivocal. In an environment as hostile to life as space, the aid and goodwill of your fellow humans wasn鈥檛 optional.

When Holden and his crew board the Scopuli they have no idea what they will find and how this lone decision will be the catalyst that will change their lives forever. Enter down and out Detective Miller, he's been given orders to investigate the missing daughter of a high-level, wealthy family. He has no idea that the case and search for one Juliette Mao will be the catalyst that will change his life forever as well.

Told from alternating POVs between Miller and Holden we're given a broad and overarching look at the entire world and future Corey has built. This novel is a behemoth of a story and clearly the first in a series. A lot of ground work is laid down in the first half of this to build a world thoroughly for the reader. The beginning got a bit bogged down for me and veered into the hard sci-fi that I'm not a big fan of. However, when the two story lines finally converge, man does this thing get cookin'.

You spent your life in a stone bubble with your food, your water, your air shipped in from places so distant you could barely find them with a telescope and a certain moral flexibility was necessary.

For being a novel so steeped in traditional science fiction tropes Leviathan Wakes was incredibly accessible as a whole. A lot of delicate intricacy is at work in this novel dealing not only in the overarching mystery but in more subtle ways as well. Things like sexism, racism, human morality and where we draw lines are discussed regularly throughout this read. The technical demands and logistics of deep space exploration and colonization were handled deftly and secured on a realistic and clearly researched basis.

I've been reading a lot of thriller / suspense novels recently and this was a really nice break from a lot of the patterns these types of stories fall into. There is a great mystery here that keeps the intrigue alive for the entirety of the read. The world building is top notch and I was left endlessly impressed throughout. Even further, it was so refreshing to read something that was full of genuinely likable characters. I felt a strong connection to the crew of the Canterbury and loved Miller's thread and timeline.

All in all this lost a star for me because while as whole the novel was accessible and enjoyable (even for a non-sci-fi reader) the first 200 or so pages dragged a bit for me. There were multiple points that I didn't understand and had to get clarification for from my husband (as this is his favorite book series). However, despite the tedious build up this was an impressive edge-of-your seat read and I enjoyed going out on a limb with this one. I'm not sure I'll be picking up the second installment right away as these novels are a huge undertaking but I'll certainly be reading on down the line!

I'll leave you with one of my favorite quotes:

There hadn鈥檛 been a cowboy on Earth in a hundred years, and Mars didn鈥檛 have a blade of grass that wasn鈥檛 under a dome or a horse that wasn鈥檛 in a zoo. Mariner valley had been settled by East Indians, Chinese and a small contingent of Texans. Apparently the drawl was viral. Because #TEXASFOREVER!
Profile Image for Samantha.
455 reviews16.5k followers
March 4, 2023
3.75 - This space opera meets crime noir is a great start to a series I'm looking forward to continuing!

2023: better on re-read - solid 4 stars
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author听9 books4,727 followers
July 1, 2018
Re-read 7/1/18:

I feel like I've read this book three times now. Sure, not quite true, but I DID watch the Expanse episodes encompassing this book. So close enough. And now, after a third (sic second) read?

Pure love.

This is the gold standard for space opera. :) Everything else is just trying to catch up. :)

My original review still stands, too. :) I love it all. It's as close to genius as this kind of story can get.


Original Review:

Fantastic Space-Opera! I didn't know what to expect when I picked up the book besides the basic premise, and yet I was slowly drawn into situation after situation that got bigger and more bad-ass, contrary to what I was expecting in the first hundred pages or so. Sure, Solar-system action, big haulers, warships... I didn't expect the scope to become as large as it soon became, and believe me, I was quite satisfied with what came next. War? No problem. An expectation of high-level manipulation? Again, no problem. Cthulhu vomit zombies from galactic gods? I DID NOT SEE THAT COMING. Sorry about the spoilers, folks. I couldn't resist, especially how well it was developed and written and snared me big time. The title could have been filler, but actually, it was spot on mythological-wise. There were quite a few great cultural references that never felt strained or out of place. I was frankly delighted by the story and ideas. I've read quite a few novels that couldn't match this one.

I am tempted to compare this, slightly, to the tone and complexity available in Brin's Startide Rising. Nothing quite matches between SR and LW except the amount of world-building, depth of characterizations, implied scope, and delightful multiple plot twists. That is a lot, mind you, but in no way are the two related in the story! Leviathan Wakes was my first intro into the Expanse and I'll be looking forward to reading all of the rest, including the not-yet-released 4th book, with great anticipation.

Great, great space opera!
Profile Image for Samir.
116 reviews224 followers
February 3, 2018
Actual rating: 4.5 stars.

Leviathan Wakes is a joint venture of Daniel Abraham, writer of the Long Prince Quartet and The Dagger and the Coin series, and Ty Franck, George R.R. Martin鈥檚 former assistant and science fiction writer. They are writing under the pen name James S.A. Corey.

This is the first installment of The Expanse series which, at this point, has seven novels already published which means two things; the series is very successful and I鈥檓 very late to this party.

I did some research and found an interesting article about the collaboration of the authors and the process which led to making/writing this novel. Ty Franck initially created The Expanse as the setting for a MMO role-playing game. He created a solar system that included colonies on the Moon, Mars, the asteroid belt and faraway planets, ruled by three major factions; Earth, Mars and the Outer Planets. There was also an alien presence, with a role to mix up the balance between factions. He also set up a political commotion to create conflict among the factions. Unfortunately, at the time, his efforts to create this game were futile because he couldn鈥檛 find investors. He later started to run it as a text based role-playing game on a gaming forum, and there, the story began to form along with the characters, but eventually, the participants lost interest.

Franck met Abraham at the science fiction convention but they became friends much later when Franck joined the local collective of science fiction writers called Critical Mass, with members such as Abraham, Martin, Tregillis, among others. They heard about his game and asked him to set one up for them. After a couple of sessions, Abraham was impressed with the level of detail and thought the setting would make a great novel. The initial plan was for Abraham to write a book based on Franck's notes but the first attempt failed. Abraham wrote the prologue and the first chapter but Franck wasn't satisfied because Abraham didn't see the world in the same way. He rewrote the chapters and after that, they began to alternate chapters. Franck wrote the chapters following Holden and Abraham wrote the ones following Miller. Abraham focused on the prose and filling in the details regarding characters and Franck focused on the world building and the plot. Leviathan Wakes was born.

As I mentioned above, the story takes place in the Sol system; the Moon, Mars, the asteriod Belt and beyond. Humanity has colonized the planets but the interstellar travel is still beyond their reach.The Sol system has become a network of colonies with tensions brewing, the mineral rich outer planets begrudge their dependence on Earth and Mars and the political and military influence they have over the Belt and beyond.

The novel is written in a third person limited style and each chapter is told from the POV of a central character. The first one is Jim Holden, the captain of the ice miner who, along with his crew, stumbles upon a derelict, abandoned ship, the Scopuli, and uncovers a secret that threatens to throw the entire system into war. The other one is Miller, a washed up detective, given a case to find a missing girl and his investigation leads him to the Scopuli and Holden. Soon, they find themselves on the same side, and while the solar system is on the brink of the civil war, they discover a vast conspiracy that threatens the entire human race.

It's hard to say more without giving up the major plot twists so I'll leave it at that and hope that would be enough to intrigue you.

Even though Leviathan Wakes is imagined to have a classic space opera feel, I'm very glad to inform you that it doesn't suffer from the dreary info dumps about technology and space stuff. There are some technical inputs but nothing that will make you feel bored.

There is something for everyone here; a gripping story, detailed world building, detective mystery, spaceship combats, thrilling action scenes, suspense, and the best of all, a cast of great, fleshed out characters, which drive this great story with an unpredictable ending.

The series has been adapted for TV, also under the title The Expanse, if you want catch a glimpse of what you can expect from the book. I must admit, I watched the first season of the show before I've read the book and the show intrigued me enough to give the book a try, and after reading it, I must say the casting for the show was very well done and it was kinda cool going through the book with the character's appearances already formed in my mind.

I highly recommend this novel, even to those of you who aren't fans of the space stuff, and I hope you'll enjoy it as much as I did because I can't wait to start the next one.
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,797 reviews4,468 followers
November 3, 2020
5.0 Stars
Video Review:
Spoiler Discussion:


I absolutely loved this first novel in the The Expense series. This could be a case of reading the right book and at the right time, but Leviathan Wakes has officially earned a place on my favourites shelf. When I started Leviathan Wakes,I was craving a long, absorbing scifi space opera and the book completely delivered.

Despite the length, I read this book very quickly, picking up the book whenever I had a free moment. The chapters were short, flipping between the two main characters' perspectives, which I found equally engaging. The story itself is very gripping with plenty action and adventure. The chapters often ended on cliff hangers, which kept me turning the pages to find out what would happen next.

This is a great place to start with science fiction. The world building and technology felt straight forward and understandable. The novel crosses into other genres with elements of mystery and horror, creating appeal to a wider audience.

This series has been pitched as the science fiction version of George R.R. Martin's fantasy series and I understand the comparison. While less complex, with a very different plot, Leviathan Wakes gave me the same immersive, cutthroat reading experience that I loved in A Song of Ice and Fire.

If you're in the mood for science fiction, I highly recommend picking up Leviathan Wakes. I cannot wait to continue on with the next book in this series!
Profile Image for Richard Derus.
3,646 reviews2,193 followers
October 1, 2019
Okay, I admit it. I was wrong. It's a solid 3-plus star read. Not quite a four, there are a few focus issues...extended time spent in Eros's casino level, f/ex...where the point gets made a bit harder than is good for the story. But my dismissive early review is wrong.

Real Rating: 2.5* of five
**UPDATE 23 October 2018** The is a whopping $2.99! Even *I* would buy it at that price...if I hadn't already read it.

**UPDATE 24 JUNE 2018** I love the series, now in its third season, a lot. I was delighted to see the folks at Amazon Prime Video will give it a fourth season. But presents a really good reason why the book is good. (I'm not a fan, but the podcaster makes a really case for it.)

**UPDATE 22 December 2016** This is a mea-culpa of epic proportions. Syfy did a stellar job of making this series. I couldn't have been more wrong about the series, though I still don't like the books. This video of a Google Talk from 2014 is a terrific proof of why the series works so well. Excellent television! Binge on the series at for the holidays.

**UPDATE 6 September 2013** More Suckass News Dept, from SFSignal: "Variety is reporting that scribes Mark Fergus and Hawk Ostby (Iron Man and Children of Men) will script the pilot of the how called The Expanse, which is based on the series of novels written by Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck under the pseudonym James S.A. Corey.

The book series consists of Leviathan Wakes, Caliban鈥檚 War, Abaddon鈥檚 Gate and the soon-to-be-released Cibola Burn.

The Expanse will be an hour long SciFi drama 鈥渨ith elements of a detective procedural, centring on a cover-up of the discovery of alien life鈥�.

Not much else is known at this point. Stay tuned!"

Yuck. Couldn't pick a GOOD series. No no no.

The Publisher Says: Humanity has colonized the solar system - Mars, the Moon, the Asteroid Belt and beyond - but the stars are still out of our reach.

Jim Holden is XO of an ice miner making runs from the rings of Saturn to the mining stations of the Belt. When he and his crew stumble upon a derelict ship, The Scopuli, they find themselves in possession of a secret they never wanted. A secret that someone is willing to kill for - and kill on a scale unfathomable to Jim and his crew. War is brewing in the system unless he can find out who left the ship and why.

Detective Miller is looking for a girl. One girl in a system of billions, but her parents have money and money talks. When the trail leads him to The Scopuli and rebel sympathizer Holden, he realizes that this girl may be the key to everything.

Holden and Miller must thread the needle between the Earth government, the Outer Planet revolutionaries, and secretive corporations - and the odds are against them. But out in the Belt, the rules are different, and one small ship can change the fate of the universe.

My Review: Exactly half-way to a five-star world-beating yodel-worthy space opera. An extremely interesting choice of time to explore, sort of late Red Mars-to-early-Green Mars time. A choice group of characters, the standard Hero's Journey plot, and away we go!

Only we don't so much. We stall out on characterization...flat-ish, unsurprising...we hop around in PoV terms until I feel like a flea on a chihuahua that ate some coffee beans and is more manic than usual. We keep events hurtling along, far too many of them in fact, and we mangle our hands in the machinery of alienness.

We did too much, ate too much, played too rough. Our tummy hurts now, and we need a nap.

Plus? I hate the ending so much I want to send the editor a nastygram. THIS COULD HAVE AND SHOULD HAVE BEEN FIXED. It's not for the author to do, this is a collaboration and that means sometimes a referee is needed. This was one of them. No way would I read the next book! And that's sad, because I really really like The Expanse and its cool politics and people.
Profile Image for Alejandro.
1,243 reviews3,730 followers
June 20, 2015
A fair option of new science-fiction book series.


FRESH SCIENCE FICTION

I have a lot of curiousity about this series since it seemed like a very good option in new sci-fi. I mean, out of the obvious well-known sci-fi space opera books in the market, this "Expanse" series sounded like a good way to read something fresh in the field of sci-fi.

And I was right. I liked the book.

First of all, maybe you already know but anyway, I want to mention that "James S.A. Corey", the author, is a pen name used by two writers that they collaborated to make this book. Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck. And while they were writing the book, they got tips and advices from a Writers' Group with big names like George R.R. Martin.


SOLAR SYSTEM... A VERY CROWDED PLACE

The ambiance work here is monumental, since they really constructed their own book universe leaving nothing to chance. Technology, political situation, social interaction, etc... in the first two or four chapters you may feel a little like fish out of water, working hard to absorb the environment of this literary universe, but I don't think you will need more than that. After you get the tech babble and socio-political situation, you will see it that it's not so hard to understand at all.

In the first part of the story, you will get two different genres, the standard space opera that you would expect to find but also you will get a true crime noir novel here, since the book has two main protagonists: Holden, a space hero; and, Miller, a detective cop.

I have hard times to like Holden, it's not like that he isn't a nice guy, but maybe he is too nice. I mean, many times I see him like a naive idealistic fool. While Miller, I like him right away from the beginning. However, part of the beauty in this book is the colliding of this totally opposite points of view. None of both are totally right, but also, they aren't totally wrong.

Another cool thing of reading new sci-fi is uncertainty. I mean, if you are reading a Star Trek novel (that I love a lot), you know clearly who is the good guy and who is a bad boy, but here, sometimes you don't know who to trust or not, so you feel in the same boat than the protagonists and you share their fear of falling into a trap.

I am amazed that the authors said that they weren't working too hard to get a "hard science" story, and obviously I don't know how truthful can be the science babble that they used on the book, but trust me, that sounds quite real and you feel that all can be possible and very realistic not matter that they are dealing with spaceships and things like that.

At the end, the story is a simple one if you try to make a resume of it, but I think that's a good thing. Inserting details in the story to make it feeling realistic is good, but you have to keep the main storyline simple, in that way, the readers won't feel lost in the middle of the book and they will enjoy the experience of reading it.







Profile Image for Rick Riordan.
Author听306 books445k followers
November 8, 2013
It had been a while since I'd read a straight-up space opera sci fi, so I gave it a try and loved it.

I especially liked the scope of the novel, which is set a few centuries in the future, when humanity has colonized much of the solar system but still has not reached the stars (or found alien life). Sadly, human politics and jingoism haven't changed much. Earth and Mars are in an uneasy alliance, and the humans living out on the asteroids of "the Belt" feel like exploited colonists. A fringe group called the OPA are agitating for war, with echoes of the American Revolution. Against this backdrop, two men from very different backgrounds are pulled into a horrifying mystery -- a disappearing ship, a girl with a complicated past, a Black Ops attack that threatens to start a solar-system-wide war, and a discovery that could change or destroy humanity.

The mystery will keep the pages turning. The characters are vividly brought to life. And the world is just alien enough, and just familiar enough, that I'll be anxious to read more books about. An adult novel, but YA sci fi fans will also love it.
Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,562 reviews11 followers
May 3, 2022
Leviathan Wakes (Expanse, #1), James S.A. Corey, Ty Franck

Leviathan Wakes (2011) is a science fiction novel by James S. A. Corey, the pen name of Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck. It is the first book in the Expanse series, followed by Caliban's War (2012), Abaddon's Gate (2013), Cibola Burn (2014), Nemesis Games (2015), Babylon's Ashes (2016), Persepolis Rising (2017), Tiamat's Wrath (2019) and ....

Humanity has colonized the solar system: Mars, the Moon, the Asteroid Belt and beyond, but the stars are still out of our reach. ...

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賳賯賱 賳賲賵賳賴 賲鬲賳:(丕夭 讴鬲丕亘 诏爻鬲乇賴: 爻乇丌睾丕夭: 芦噩賵賱蹖禄: 賴卮鬲 乇賵夭 倬蹖卮 芦丕爻讴丕倬蹖賵賱丕蹖禄 乇丕 鬲爻禺蹖乇 讴乇丿賴 亘賵丿賳丿貙 賵 芦噩賵賱蹖 賲丕卅賵禄 丿蹖诏乇 噩丕賳卮 亘賴 賱亘卮 乇爻蹖丿賴 亘賵丿貙 賵 丨丕囟乇 亘賵丿 亘丕 蹖讴 诏賱賵賱賴 禺賱丕氐卮 讴賳賳丿貨 賴卮鬲 乇賵夭 丕爻丕乇鬲 鬲賵蹖 讴賲丿貙 丕夭 夭賳丿诏蹖 爻蹖乇卮 讴乇丿賴 亘賵丿貨 丿賵 乇賵夭 丕賵賱 乇丕 亘蹖丨乇讴鬲 賲丕賳丿賴 亘賵丿貙 卮讴 賳丿丕卮鬲 賲乇丿丕賳 夭乇賴 倬賵卮蹖 讴賴 夭賳丿丕賳蹖卮 讴乇丿賴 亘賵丿賳丿貙 卮賵禺蹖 賳丿丕卮鬲賳丿貨 爻賮蹖賳賴 丕蹖 讴賴 丿乇 丌賳 夭賳丿丕賳蹖 卮丿賴 亘賵丿貙 鬲丕 趩賳丿 爻丕毓鬲 丕賵賱 丨乇讴鬲 賳賲蹖讴乇丿貙 賵 丿乇 賳鬲蹖噩賴 丿乇 丨丕賱鬲 亘蹖 賵夭賳蹖 賲蹖丕賳 夭賲蹖賳 賵 賴賵丕 卮賳丕賵乇 亘賵丿貙 囟乇亘賴 賴丕蹖 賲賱丕蹖賲蹖 亘賴 丕胤乇丕賮 賲蹖夭丿貙 鬲丕 亘賴 丿蹖賵丕乇賴丕貙 賵 賱亘丕爻 賮囟丕蹖蹖 禺賵蹖卮 亘乇禺賵乇丿 賳讴賳丿貨 賵賯鬲蹖 爻賮蹖賳賴 卮乇賵毓 亘賴 丨乇讴鬲 讴乇丿貙 賵 賯丿乇鬲 倬蹖卮乇丕賳賴 亘丕毓孬 卮丿 賵夭賳 倬蹖丿丕 讴賳丿貙 亘蹖氐丿丕 丌賳賯丿乇 賴賲丕賳胤賵乇 爻乇 倬丕 丕蹖爻鬲丕丿貙 鬲丕 倬丕賴丕蹖卮 禺卮讴 卮丿賳丿貙 亘毓丿 亘賴 丨丕賱鬲 噩賳蹖賳蹖 乇賵蹖 夭賲蹖賳 賳卮爻鬲貨 丿乇 賱亘丕爻 倬乇賵丕夭卮 丕丿乇丕乇 賲蹖讴乇丿貙 亘賴 亘賵 賵 禺蹖爻蹖 爻賵夭丌賵乇卮 丕賴賲蹖鬲 賳賲蹖丿丕丿貙 賵 賮賯胤 賳诏乇丕賳 亘賵丿 賱蹖夭 賳禺賵乇丿貙 賵 乇賵蹖 禺蹖爻蹖 夭賲蹖賳 賳蹖賮鬲丿貙 賳亘丕蹖丿 爻乇 賵 氐丿丕 賲蹖讴乇丿貨 丌賳賴丕 亘賴 丕賵 卮賱蹖讴 賲蹖讴乇丿賳丿貨 乇賵夭 爻賵賲貙 賮卮丕乇 鬲卮賳诏蹖 亘丕毓孬 卮丿貙 丿爻鬲 亘賴 讴丕乇 卮賵丿貨 爻乇 賵 氐丿丕蹖 爻賮蹖賳賴貙 丕丨丕胤賴 丕卮 讴乇丿賴 亘賵丿貨 睾乇卮 囟毓蹖賮 賲丕丿賵賳 氐賵鬲 賲賵鬲賵乇 倬蹖卮乇丕賳賴貙 賵 乇丌讴鬲賵乇貙 賴蹖爻 賵 鬲倬 鬲倬 賴賲蹖卮诏蹖 丌賴賳貙 賵 丿乇賴丕蹖 賴蹖丿乇賵賱蹖讴 賲蹖丕賳 毓乇卮賴 賴丕貙 讴賴 丿丕卅賲 亘丕夭 賵 亘爻鬲賴 賲蹖卮丿賳丿貙 賵 囟乇亘賴 賴丕蹖 趩讴賲賴 賴丕蹖 爻賳诏蹖賳貙 讴賴 乇賵蹖 毓乇卮賴 賴丕蹖 丌賴賳蹖賳 乇丕賴 賲蹖乇賮鬲賳丿貨 丌賳賯丿乇 賲賳鬲馗乇 卮丿貙 鬲丕 鬲賲丕賲 氐丿丕賴丕 賲丨賵 賵 丿賵乇 卮丿賳丿貙 亘毓丿 賱亘丕爻 賮囟丕蹖蹖卮 乇丕 丕夭 诏蹖乇賴 賴丕 亘丕夭 讴乇丿貙 賵 讴賮 讴賲丿 诏匕丕卮鬲貨 賴賲丕賳胤賵乇 讴賴 诏賵卮 亘賴 夭賳诏 亘賵丿 賲亘丕丿丕 氐丿丕蹖蹖 賳夭丿蹖讴 卮賵丿貙 亘賴 丌乇丕賲蹖 賱亘丕爻 乇丕 亘丕夭 讴乇丿貙 賵 匕禺蹖乇賴 蹖 丌亘卮 乇丕 禺丕乇噩 讴乇丿貨 丌亘 讴賴賳賴 亘賵丿 賵 亘賵 诏乇賮鬲賴 亘賵丿貙 馗丕賴乇丕賸 賲丿鬲 夭蹖丕丿蹖 丕夭 丌禺乇蹖賳 亘丕乇貙 讴賴 讴爻蹖 丌賳 賱亘丕爻 乇丕 倬賵卮蹖丿賴貙 蹖丕 鬲毓賲蹖乇卮 讴乇丿賴 亘賵丿貙 賲蹖诏匕卮鬲貨 丕賲丕 倬爻 丕夭 丿賵 乇賵夭 亘蹖 丌亘蹖貙 丌亘 诏乇賲 賵 诏賱 丌賱賵丿賽 丿丕禺賱 賲丨賮馗賴 蹖 賱亘丕爻貙 亘賴鬲乇蹖賳 趩蹖夭蹖 亘賵丿 讴賴 丿乇 鬲賲丕賲 毓賲乇卮 賳賵卮蹖丿賴 亘賵丿貨 亘丕蹖丿 噩賱賵蹖 禺賵丿卮 乇丕 賲蹖诏乇賮鬲貙 讴賴 鬲賲丕賲卮 乇丕 蹖讴噩丕 賳亘賱毓丿貙 賵 亘丕賱丕 賳蹖丕賵乇丿貨 賵賯鬲蹖 丿賵亘丕乇賴 丕丿乇丕乇 丿丕卮鬲貙 賲丨賮馗賴 蹖 丕丿乇丕乇 賱亘丕爻 賮囟丕蹖蹖 乇丕 亘蹖乇賵賳 丌賵乇丿貙 賵 賴賲丕賳噩丕 讴丕乇卮 乇丕 讴乇丿貨 乇賵蹖 夭賲蹖賳 賳卮爻鬲貙 丨丕賱丕 讴賴 亘賴 賱亘丕爻 賮囟丕蹖蹖卮 鬲讴蹖賴 丿丕丿賴 亘賵丿貙 賵 讴賲 賵 亘蹖卮 噩丕蹖卮 乇丕丨鬲 亘賵丿貙 亘賴 丕蹖賳 賮讴乇 賲蹖讴乇丿貙 讴賴 趩賴 讴爻丕賳蹖 丕爻蹖乇卮 讴乇丿賴 丕賳丿貙 賳蹖乇賵蹖 賳馗丕賲蹖 丕卅鬲賱丕賮貙 丿夭丿丕賳 賮囟丕蹖蹖貙 蹖丕 丕卮禺丕氐蹖 亘丿鬲乇 丕夭 丕蹖賳賴丕責)貨 倬丕蹖丕賳 賳賯賱

鬲丕乇蹖禺 亘賴賳诏丕賲 乇爻丕賳蹖 21/04/1399賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 12/02/1401賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 丕. 卮乇亘蹖丕賳蹖
Profile Image for B..
56 reviews5 followers
October 6, 2018
Edit: demoting this to 3 stars because the 4th simply hasn鈥檛 been sitting right with me and has generally been haunting my dreams.

I鈥檇 describe this novel as 鈥榚xtremely okay鈥�. It鈥檚 well-written, has plenty of heartwarming and funny moments, likeable characters (for the most part) and plenty of action and intrigue from the get-go as well as consistently throughout. I can absolutely see why they made this into a TV show (which influenced me to read this in the first place), BUT... there鈥檚 something missing. For all its competence in execution, nothing particularly wowed me in the way that I鈥檇 need it to to give it, say, 5 stars.

Here are the flaws that almost tipped it to 3:

Miller - a great addition when he鈥檚 working off the rest of the team; a depressing arse with not entirely convincing motivations when he鈥檚 on his own.

The length - this feels extremely bloated. The plot is constantly moving, there鈥檚 always something happening and as far as I can see, every piece feels necessary to get to the end, BUT, it鈥檚 not always a fun ride. It can be a bit of a slog. Whenever I see a flaw in something I read, I think to myself, 鈥榟ow would I solve this problem?鈥� and I honestly don鈥檛 have an easy answer to this one. The length-to-interest ratio was just off in parts. That said, I justify Breaking Bad to newcomers by saying that it does start a little shakily, but it pays off in the later seasons. Some stories just take a little longer to get to where they鈥檙e going, but for the moment, I鈥檓 not feeling the satisfaction you want when you finish a novel of this size.

In the end, I had to give this 3.799 smackeroons for the parts that I did like. It鈥檚 certainly not bad by any means, but I鈥檝e read better sci-fi this year. Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky ruined this one for me.
Profile Image for Ira Perkins.
35 reviews506 followers
June 5, 2023
A pretty stellar (hah!) beginning to a big-ol' space opera

Final Rating: 4.05/5 馃寱馃寱馃寱馃寱馃写

Diving into Leviathan Wakes without having seen the TV series, I wasn't quite sure what to expect especially seeing as I don't particularly like sci-fi books/worlds. Kudos to the authors though, as despite my reservations, this riveting space opera managed to pull me in with its captivating characters and kept me hooked with its awesome unexpected twists and turns. Overall it delivered a thrilling journey through a complex universe that has left me eager to check out the next few books in the series - and questioning again "maybe I can be a sci-fi guy?".

World Building: 3.5/5
Given the whole space setting, straight off the bat it was going to be pretty hard for me to absolutely love the world that this book is built in. With that being said, I thought the author's attention to detail, from the intricacies of space travel to the subtle cultural differences between various factions, made the Expanse universe a truly believable one... or as believable as a futuristic sci-fi world can be.... Although I personally skimmed some of the lengthier descriptive parts, that didn't detract from my experience much at all - as there was so much else to be enjoyed.

One thing I really did enjoy was the politically-charged backdrop that the story takes place in. It gives us a future where humans have spread out across the solar system, and Earth, Mars, and the Belters are all caught up in this crazy dance of power. The book really nails how these different groups have their own unique cultures, values, and goals, but also how they kinda depend on each other, making things super tense. The political stuff in the story feels legit and well thought-out, like you've got all these factions duking it out for control, influence, and the good stuff. It's got that vibe of the best political thrillers, and you can't help but get hooked as it all unfolds. With all the alliances, backstabbing, and hidden agendas, you're in for one heck of an engaging read.

"The cold equations of power and politics had never impressed him. People were more than the masks they wore."

Story Telling: 4.5/5
Leviathan Wakes is a wild ride that expertly blends mystery, action, and political drama into one heck of a space adventure. The detective noir half of the story is centered around the puzzling disappearance of Julie Mao, a young heiress with powerful connections, our heroes Holden and Miller find themselves smack dab in the middle of a massive conspiracy. They face off against ruthless corporations, shifty politicians, and a terrifying bioweapon called the "protomolecule" that could change everything. As they race against the clock to uncover the truth, the stakes couldn't be higher 鈥� they're trying to save the entire solar system from spiraling into chaos and war.

A huge advantage of not having watched the TV series is that I was in the dark about how the story progressed. This was a huge boon, as there were more twists and turns than a roller coaster! On top of that it's packed with jaw-dropping action sequences and heart-wrenching character moments. The way the plot keeps you guessing and constantly on your toes is nothing short of brilliant. Leviathan Wakes is an unforgettable journey that will leave you absolutely hooked on the Expanse series and craving more of this epic space opera.

I think there might be one tiny hiccup with Leviathan Wakes: at the beginning, it might feel a bit slow, and you might think there's a whole lot of info crammed in. But seriously, don't let that put you off! Once things get rolling, the action and suspense crank up big time, and it's totally worth sticking it out through the early bits.

"Sometimes you don't know what the right thing is until you've tried everything else."

Characters: 5/5
For me the absolute highlight of the book was the two main characters. First up you've got Jim Holden (who feels very similar to Captain Malcolm Reynolds out of the TV series Firefly), an Earther and the XO of this ice-hauler. He's all about morals and doing the right thing, but sometimes that lands him in hot water. Throughout the book, we see him learning the hard way that the world isn't always black and white. His journey from being a bit naive to really grasping the complexities of people and politics is honestly pretty compelling.

Then there's Joe Miller (who for me is the much more relateable of the two), a Belter and a tough-as-nails detective. He's had a rough go of it and is pretty jaded, but when he starts investigating the case of missing heiress Julie Mao, he finds a new sense of purpose. Miller is deeply flawed and has experienced hardships that has left him pretty disillusioned, but he remains driven by a need to uncover the truth and a strong sense of justice, finding a sense of purpose and redemption along the way. A really good story arc.

The back-and-forth between him and Holden is one of the best parts of Leviathan Wakes鈥攊t's just so real and engaging. It reminds me of the partnership between Fox Mulder and Dana Scully in The X-Files. Similar to Mulder and Scully, Holden and Miller often serve as foils for each other, with their opposing perspectives leading to engaging debates and contributing to their growth as individuals.... As one last point, the book's packed with a bunch of other awesome characters who each feel pretty unique and interesting (even though you don't get POV's from them) that were just really well done.

"In a culture that wallowed in the victimization of others, he wasn't about to wait for someone else to save him."

Writing Style: 3.5/5
Leviathan Wakes serves up some pretty solid prose. It's got this cool mix of space opera, hard sci-fi, and detective noir vibes, which makes for a really unique and captivating read. The descriptions are on point, painting a vivid picture of the world and making you feel like you're right there with the characters. I think where it really shines is the snappy dialogue between characters, with conversations feeling genuine and snappy, that really helped me get into the characters' heads. Even though the book gets into some heavy technical and political stuff, the prose still manages to keep it engaging and not too overwhelming - or if you're like me, you can just skim parts of the world-building that don't particularly interest you.

Of course, no book is perfect, and there might be a few moments where the prose could be a bit smoother or the pacing a little more balanced - I especially found that the first half of the book was a bit of a struggle to get through in terms of slow story build up. But overall, Leviathan Wakes hits the mark with its prose, giving you a fun, immersive read that'll have you turning pages like there's no tomorrow.

Enjoyment: 3.75/5
When I first started reading Leviathan Wakes, I have to admit, the beginning felt a bit slow for my taste. The book took its time to build up the sci-fi world and introduce the characters... So maybe a 3/5 for the beginning... However, the second half of the story was a real turning point. As the pace picked up, I found myself completely engaged by the thrilling action, surprising twists, and the evolving relationships between the characters... For ratings probably 4.5 out of 5 by the end... So, if you're considering giving it a try, be patient鈥攊t's definitely worth it by the end! Also if you're into Sci-Fi, then this would completely be up your alley.

In short, Leviathan Wakes is a wild ride with a little bit of a slow start, but one that is totally worth sticking around for. The characters and plot twists will kept me hooked until the end, and I'm really looking forward to jumping into the next books in the series - that I've heard just get better and better.

Final Rating: 4.05/5 馃寱馃寱馃寱馃寱馃写

My favourite books of 2023 in preferential order
馃寱馃寱馃寱馃寱馃寱:
1. - (My Review)
2.
3. - (My Review)
4. - (My Review)
馃寱馃寱馃寱馃寱馃寳:
5. - (My Review)
6.
7. - (My Review)
8. - (My Review)
9.
馃寱馃寱馃寱馃寱馃写:
10. - (My Review)
11. - (My Review)
12. - (My Review)
馃寱馃寱馃寱馃寳馃写:
13. - (My Review)
馃寱馃寱馃寱馃写馃写:
14. - (My Review)
15. - (My Review)
馃寱馃寱馃写馃写馃写:
16. - (My Review)
Profile Image for Philip.
562 reviews825 followers
January 5, 2019
3.5ish stars.

Good, old-fashioned outer space sci-fi. It's obviously influenced by the old-school greats, and if I'm being honest, doesn't add a lot of novelty to the genre, but it broke me out of a deadly reading slump for which I'll be forever grateful. Who knew such a chunkster could be such a fast read?

There's some awesome world-building going on, particularly the disparity between the inner and outer planets, and the differences in physiology of their respective inhabitants. The tension between the planets is palpable. It's also a cool mystery that's smart enough to keep readers guessing, and layered enough that it's engaging for the entire long journey until the pieces fall into place.

The characters are pretty stock. There's Miller, the classic noir-ish, world-weary gumshoe, glued to his pork pie hat a la Gene Hackman in The French Connection. And there's his foil, Holden, the young, idealistic do-gooder, and good-doer of the ladies. They never quite become three-dimensional for me, though I don't dislike them. There are also familiar plot points, such as star-crossed lovers and the "struggle to sacrifice the known individual for the faceless greater good," but they're wrapped up in an likable enough story that they don't become tired.

I'm simultaneously reading and watching the SyFy TV series and find that they clarify and complement each other well.

Also there are vomit zombies. If nothing else, read for the vomit zombies.

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