Woile reviewed Tiamat's Wrath by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #8)
Review of "Tiamat's Wrath" on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
Fantastic!
Tiamat's Wrath is a science fiction novel by James S. A. Corey, the pen name of Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck, and the eighth book in their series The Expanse. Following the series' tradition of referring to ancient mythology in its titles, the book's title references the Babylonian goddess Tiamat, who took part in the creation of the universe.
Fantastic!
Impossible to stop reading it!
After the previous volume, I was afraid I'd have to struggle again with this one. That wasn't the case. Started out enjoying it, and by the midway point had become the first real "page turner" I've read in a while. It helped that I was actually surprised by some of the developments, and that the antagonist point of view characters weren't really "bad" guys.
2021 Re-read
"We aren't the aggressor here. We didn't hit anyone first. We just haven't hit anyone back until now."
My mini re-read of the final Expanse books was perfectly timed for the original November 19 publication date of #9...but looks like I'm 10 days early.
In any case, I feel ready and primed to see how this series concludes. I am in awe that the Amazon series thinks they can conclude the story in six seasons while I wonder how the protomolecule will be concluded in the books, or will it be focusing on how Laconia and everyone else get along?
My initial review of Tiamat's Wrath felt there was too little spent on the big bad, but there was always enough to remind you it was happening and was a threat in the background, and my wish is that it takes the forefront and Elvi's research (perhaps …
2021 Re-read
"We aren't the aggressor here. We didn't hit anyone first. We just haven't hit anyone back until now."
My mini re-read of the final Expanse books was perfectly timed for the original November 19 publication date of #9...but looks like I'm 10 days early.
In any case, I feel ready and primed to see how this series concludes. I am in awe that the Amazon series thinks they can conclude the story in six seasons while I wonder how the protomolecule will be concluded in the books, or will it be focusing on how Laconia and everyone else get along?
My initial review of Tiamat's Wrath felt there was too little spent on the big bad, but there was always enough to remind you it was happening and was a threat in the background, and my wish is that it takes the forefront and Elvi's research (perhaps to the equivalent of the Rosetta Stone) can bring this storyline to a meaningful end.
This book was excellent on the re-read and I was surprised how much I remembered, but yet I feel like there was more time spent on Laconia than just a single book. The Tempest Storm engagement (utilizing antimatter) is such a kick ass chapter that it makes me a bit bummed non book readers won't get to experience that moment (at least not yet).
The characters in this series are excellent and applaud Abraham and Franck for the work they have done on the main leads.
And that's the point I keep trying to make with her, my friend. In a fight like this, unless you're willing to lose everything to win, you lose it all by losing.
How are the former members of the Rocinante different than the Free Navy from earlier in the series? How does one revolutionary team differ from the others? Is the Earths/Mars alliance standing up to Laconia different from the OPA? History repeats and suddenly find ourselves rooting on the rebels. What a strange turn of events these books have taken us on, and yet it feels natural and how it would be when history repeats itself.
Even when they were gone, the next generation up would keep echoes of them.
The team is a little older and I feel like Naomi, Alex, Bobbie will be the Fred Johnson figure to the crew they are shipping with now. The way Holden noticed Fred getting older but still admired what he did (Butcher of Anderson Station) will be how those who worked with Alex now view him. That reverence and respect typically given to Holden will be what inspires the next round of resistance fighters.
It was the single central argument that the universe had made to her through her whole life, and she was only now seeing it clearly: Wars never ended because one side was defeated. They ended because the enemies were reconciled. Anything else was just a postponement of the next round of violence.
A common gripe I have had about the series is the constant human vs. human struggle without much focus or concern for the big bad that exists in the great beyond. Now in the penultimate book that still holds true, however there are a few more eyes are looking up in the sky and wondering about the enemy that exists beyond the rings. It's been a challenge to learn what the big bad can do but the Laconia tit-for-tat experiments have helped shed light and give credence to what Holden witnessed as planet killing powers.
Winston Duarte had founded Laconia by betraying Mars and looting the navy. It wasn't a great surprise that distrust of the people in his chain of command was institutional.
With only one more book to go I'm not sure what I expect to be answered. The focus of the series has been on family and struggling for peace and I feel that's as far as the book will go. There will be no answers provided for the big bad and humanity will learn to live without angering those beings and avoid any further wrath.
He was a good... Well, he wasn't really exactly a good person. He cared enough to try, anyway. But he was loyal as hell.
Tiamat's Wrath did everything perfectly and the movement from space battles (and these were a doozie!!), political struggles and rebels versus Laconia kept the story fresh and I was anxious to read more. There were numerous POV's on different areas and the pace was brisk. For a time Teresa's chapters slowed things down but the brooding teenager slowly gave way to a quick to anger heiress that made some rash decisions and in doing so offered a good perspective inside Laconia's state building.
"And this is the Rocinante...and I don't know who most of the rest of these people are, but one way or another, we're home."
And yet it always comes back to family. I may lament that some characters have gone (or stayed) but the story is staying true to this theme and after eight books with them they really do feel like family. Any other setting than the Rocinante feels foreign, someone else operating comms beside Naomi is foreign and someone drinking something besides coffee is an insult. The books have had time to grow the characters and the way I think of how Robin Hobb developed hers in the Realm of the Elderlings I will remember The Expanse for the characters too.
Every place had the dream of what it could become. Dreams were fragile things to build with. Titanium and ceramic lasted longer.
I held off on starting this series because I wanted the final book released (or at least have a release date announced) so now I join the queue with others waiting for the epic conclusion to the story. Based on how past conclusions to the trilogies have gone I expect the final one to be epic and roaring at a break neck pace.
If you want peace, lose gracefully. We have bigger problems.
It was alright. There are story elements that were set up in the last two books and tgen undone in this one. I can't help wondering what the point of those events were in the first place.
Just another fun, entertaining & surprising space opera. I am looking forward to the last book in the series, late this year. Books like these make covid quarantine(s) just fly...
Probably my favorite out of the series so far.
There are only a handful of series I can think of that have stayed this good through this many books -- Jordan's Wheel of Time, Butcher's Dresden Files, Pratchett's Discworld, a few others -- and I see no reason to think the next book, whenever it arrives, will be any different than this one. Which was great, by the way. Excellent stuff.
That took me a lot longer than I thought xD Allover, I think the book had its lengths. Like most books in the series, there's very little happening in the range of 10-40 and 60-90% of the book, and all the action happens in the middle and at the end. Could use more balance. But allover, I'm VERY interested in reading the final book now...
The best of the eight out of The Expanse series so far. Fantastic writing, hardly surprising, and a convincing, gripping storyline. I cannot wait for the final installment, although I have to say that it’ll be extremely difficult to live without waiting, and reading, another part of this brilliant space opera.
It's definitely a 5. I need anlot more processing time before I can break it down any more than that. There's a lot thet happens and a lot that changes. From the beginning to the end, the theme is change. And it's a wringer. Corey has been playing the long game, shifting things up in preparation for this book. That mich is evident in a lot that happens that feels familiar, but in a different way. Mich is revealed, but much remaons to be revealed...
All I can say without spoilers is that it's definitely recommended.
The Universe is Stranger Than We Can Imagine..
I like these books. They aren't really a tale of aliens which some people get raw about. It's a story of what it is to be human. All the flavors. The good, the bad, the caring, the apathetic, etc.. and what happens when you put those elements in situations, usually stressful. Usually lonely. It's a tale of who we are and why we are and I enjoy it for those reasons.
Our friends have gotten much older but the story is not done. I like books that age. The Dune series gave us 10,000 years. I enjoyed most of those very very much for the perspective it builds. It would not be hard to see this kind of series grow in that direction. Nothing certainly stopping them unless the big unknown baddies we keep messing with decide to fully wake up instead …
The Universe is Stranger Than We Can Imagine..
I like these books. They aren't really a tale of aliens which some people get raw about. It's a story of what it is to be human. All the flavors. The good, the bad, the caring, the apathetic, etc.. and what happens when you put those elements in situations, usually stressful. Usually lonely. It's a tale of who we are and why we are and I enjoy it for those reasons.
Our friends have gotten much older but the story is not done. I like books that age. The Dune series gave us 10,000 years. I enjoyed most of those very very much for the perspective it builds. It would not be hard to see this kind of series grow in that direction. Nothing certainly stopping them unless the big unknown baddies we keep messing with decide to fully wake up instead of kicking the snooze button.
The saga continues and some real trials are within these hallowed halls. Good luck voyager.
Reading this book was like eating really good, really spicy food. It hurts. But oh it's so good. Logical and tough, the story delivers on everything we've come to expect from Corey, and the crew of the Roci. Second to last in the series, Tiamat's Wrath is most akin to Leviathan's Wake, and Nemesis Games in tone and jagged edges.