Przebudzenie Lewiatana

Polish language

Published Jan. 21, 2018

ISBN:
978-83-7480-915-3
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(14 reviews)

Leviathan Wakes is a science fiction novel by James S. A. Corey, the pen name of American writers Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck. It is the first book in the Expanse series, followed by Caliban's War (2012), Abaddon's Gate (2013) and six other novels. Leviathan Wakes was nominated for the 2012 Hugo Award for Best Novel and the 2012 Locus Award for Best Science Fiction Novel. The novel was adapted for television in 2015 as the first season-and-a-half of The Expanse by Syfy. Five short stories that take place before, during, or after Leviathan Wakes were published between 2011 and 2019.

6 editions

Em va agradar més la sèrie!

No rating

Aviam, la sèrie és espectacular. Suposo que saber què passarà es menja el suspens, les engrunes que la història va posant i amb les que va afegint un vessant inesperat al gènere detectivesc i de suspens amb què comença.

Els autors van estar implicats en la sèrie i em sembla que van tenir ocasió d'autoeditar-se a millor. Tenir accés al diàleg intern dels personatges els fa xocar amb una versió més simpàtica construïda a partir de la sèrie. Això inclou el comentari social, que en una història farcida de temes de política de metròpoli vs colònia té força pes. El resum seria que la història plau força al personal liberal americà?

Em sembla que m'han faltat descripcions dels llocs i dels personatges, i desenvolupament també. He omplert els buits amb la sèrie mentalment, però no sé si això és gaire bo. Alex i Amos són molt secundaris en el llibre, …

Not very exciting...

For me, this was a frontier western story in space, and I was not sure why I should be interested. It made me question the whole premise of 'humanity conquers the solar system/universe' science fiction. Why would humanity settle Mars and the Asteroid Belt to begin with, and why would society change so little in that process?

If you like mystery, violence, horror and want it set in space, this might just be your thing; it did not appeal to me.

Review of 'Leviathan Wakes' on 'Goodreads'

Um, here's a thought, but don't read it unless you've already read the book, okay:

I feel kinda horrible to say it, but I was kinda glad when Miller got killed off. Not that I wasn't sad; he was one of my favorite characters, and I really loved how he developed over the course of the novel. It's just like this: if I'm going to stick around for a what, nine-book series, I want to see that the authors aren't afraid of change. Too many books I've read are afraid to let anything happen because they want their readers to keep loving the characters they first saw. (The Oz series is predominantly on my mind; every book solved the conflict with yet another magic object to the point where one of the later plots--and in my opinion one of the more interesting ones--has an evil magician steal all their magic …

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