L'Éveil du Léviathan

, #1

704 pages

French language

Published June 9, 2015 by Actes Sud.

ISBN:
978-2-330-05112-9
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4 stars (21 reviews)

L'humanité a colonisé le système solaire. Quand Jim Holden, second sur un transport de glace, croise la route du Scopuli, un appareil à l'abandon, il se retrouve en possession d'un secret bien encombrant. S'il ne découvre pas rapidement qui a abandonné ce vaisseau et pourquoi, le conflit latent entre le gouvernement de la Terre et les rebelles risque de se réveiller. Avec ce premier volume de la série « Expanse », James S. A. Corey signe « un space opéra qui déchire » (George R. R. Martin).

5 editions

reviewed Leviathan Wakes by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #1)

Still one of the best...

5 stars

For me, this is currently the high-water mark of modern sci-fi. It's often called "Game of Thrones in space" and while the politics of the setting definitely support that, the humor is a cut above the fantasy series. It's almost like a love letter to both earlier hard sci-fi (like the Red Mars books) and the writing of Douglas Adams or Terry Pratchett. It's not a silly book, but it's not afraid to laugh, and it lacks the "Whedonness" of other popular sci-fi. The jokes and quips are fun, in character, absolutely part of the charm, and never distracting.

This is my 3rd time reading it I think, and the plan is to read the whole series at a go. I don't feel like I'm going to get bored with it, this book was better than I remembered.

reviewed Leviathan Wakes by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #1)

Still one of the best...

5 stars

For me, this is currently the high-water mark of modern sci-fi. It's often called "Game of Thrones in space" and while the politics of the setting definitely support that, the humor is a cut above the fantasy series. It's almost like a love letter to both earlier hard sci-fi (like the Red Mars books) and the writing of Douglas Adams or Terry Pratchett. It's not a silly book, but it's not afraid to laugh, and it lacks the "Whedonness" of other popular sci-fi. The jokes and quips are fun, in character, absolutely part of the charm, and never distracting.

This is my 3rd time reading it I think, and the plan is to read the whole series at a go. I don't feel like I'm going to get bored with it, this book was better than I remembered.

reviewed Leviathan Wakes by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #1)

A Superior Introduction to the Expanse Universe

3 stars

I watched the first season of the TV show, and so my first read of Leviathan Wakes is effectively a re-read. Biases upfront though: I was disappointed with the TV show. It did a superb job of fleshing out the Belter culture, and the Colonial style excesses, corruption, and politics. What started as an analogy for European colonialism then turned out to be space fantasy, with magic driving the plot. I hated this thematic disconnect and bailed on the the TV show. But the series is generally well-regarded and I gave it a second chance, this time via the novels.

I'm glad I read Leviathan Wakes.

The book focuses on Holden and Miller, and their contrasting philosophies results in a fantastic interplay of these two main characters. More importantly, we stay focused on the mystery of the Scoupli, and this results in a tight narrative that moves at a …

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