Leviathan Wakes

Book 1 of the Expanse , #1

10th Anniversary Edition, 576 pages

English language

Published Jan. 1, 2021 by Little, Brown Book Group.

ISBN:
978-0-316-33342-9
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Humanity has colonised the solar system - Mars, the Moon, the Asteroid Belt and beyond - but the stars are still out of our reach.

Jim Holden is an officer on an ice miner making runs from the rings of Saturn to the mining stations of the Belt. When he and his crew discover a derelict ship called the Scopuli, they suddenly find themselves in possession of a deadly secret. A secret that someone is willing to kill for, and on an unimaginable scale. War is coming to the system, unless Jim can find out who abandoned 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 Holden, they both realise this girl may hold the key to everything.

Holden and …

20 editions

Absolutely cool

Original review here

This was a series I frequently saw compared with some of the all time classics of Science Fiction, such as Asimov’s Foundation or Herbert’s Dune. So I really wanted to give them a go for a while.

I have to admit the book was completely different to my expectations, but not in a bad way.

When I think of grandiose space opera classics, I kind of imagine humans expanding throughout the universe, faster than light travel and cosmical events we can’t comprehend, and technology advancements beyond compare. Of course these concepts are used in widely different ways in the genre.

In a lot of classic and modern works of science fiction, the style is usually filled with minimalist architecture, brand new tech, shiny spaceships and sterile, practical interiors.

In The Expanse’s Leviathan Wakes features Humanity expanding just in the Solar System, with …

Excellent read after enjoying the TV show

I encountered the TV show, The Expanse, before discovering it was originally a book series. I'm glad I experienced the two formats in that order. Reading the book was in some way a replay of the TV show, since I pictured and heard the actors as I read.

If you haven't come across either, Leviathan Wakes is the first in a monumental space opera series, set centuries in the future, where humans have colonized most of the solar system, where Mars is a space-faring power that exists in an uneasy and unstable tension with an overcrowded Earth, and where the "Belters" (the inhabitants of the asteroid belt and the moons of the outer planets, are resentful at how they're taken for granted and exploited by the two planets.

A powerful corporation's attempts to weaponize an alien organism destabilizes an already unstable solar system.

This massive canvas is …

Review of 'Leviathan Wakes (The Expanse, 1)' on 'Goodreads'

Of course, I never want to be disappointed in a book I’ve chosen. Somehow, I feel especially disappointed when said book is from one of my favorite genres. This was exceedingly long in relation to the number of interesting things presented. I hope this was a daily deal (that I didn’t spend an Audible credit on it). I won’t continue with the series.

Review of 'Leviathan Wakes' on 'Storygraph'

This book had been on my to-read list for quite some time, but the recent announcement regarding it's conversion to a TV show spurred my need to read this. Now that I have, I'm wondering why it took me this long.



The story moves at a good pace with a "can't put it down" feel. The characters are fantastic and really left me missing them after I finished the book. Leviathan Wakes is not in the category of hard science, but the authors do a reasonable job of keeping things in a realistic perspective and have built a solar system wide economy that is completely believable. This is good old fashioned Space Opera the way it should be and I am really looking forward to seeing this made into a TV series.

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  • American literature

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