So maybe I should read this and then try the TV show again. And if so, what do you think of it in comparison to the book? My favorite part of this book was grounding not literally humanity in our own system. A trap of science fiction can be the limitlessness of technology. No warp jumps. If you need to make a decision, it better be a good one, because if you travel one direction, only to find out you should have traveled another, everything could fall apart.
My big problem was not getting into either Holden or Miller. At least in this book. I preferred Miller on the whole, but his odd obsession with Julie never made a lot of sense to me. Agreed on the mid-future setting—it really worked for me. You are commenting using your WordPress. You are commenting using your Google account.
You are commenting using your Twitter account. You are commenting using your Facebook account. Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. Book Reviews on Buy now. Which edition of Leviathan should I read? He also has some pointers about which parts to read, depending on your interests: 1. Is it running commentary on the differences between the two? There are several. It depends on what you want.
Recommendations from our site. There are these systematic philosophical elements that make him a philosopher. It is a really remarkable feat of dialectic. One is his style of writing: he is a phrasemaker with very memorable quotations. You get this incredibly methodical approach. There are some long digressions in it on the nature of man which look dated now, but at its heart it does still have an important, timeless message: it helps explain why in a society where all hope of law and order and stability have broken down, decent people end up doing awful things to each other.
It also helps you understand another aspect of demagoguery: why dictators can be genuinely popular, if only for a while, and why, for example, fundamentalist religious movements have such appeal. You surrender your freedoms to Leviathan, the all-powerful sovereign, in exchange for being guaranteed a certain level of stability. I don't really do reviews here, but I do write recommendations for books I love. My introduction to this world was The Expanse TV series.
The show quickly became one of my favorite sci-fi series and I knew I would need to read the books. I've now read the first installment and am hooked. Leviathan Wakes is the first book in the Expanse series, written by a duo under the pen name James S.
The first thing that jumped out at me as I dove into its pages was the science. This is HARD sci-fi in the best way. I mean, check out this post on the mechanics of railguns in space. Couple that attention to detail with an epic plot and engaging, broken, beautiful characters, and you have an amazing novel on your hands.
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