Humanity has finally gone through a gate and settled on the first world in another solar system, but the settlers are being classed as illegal squatters by the corporation that believes the planet to be legally there’s. So when the corporation ship turns up with the intention of taking everything away from the settlers, the settlers have a surprise waiting for them and all hell breaks loose.
Avasaralla thinks it’ll be a great idea to send Holden to mediate and sort things out, because she thinks Holden will make such a disaster of it that it’ll scare everyone back in Sol system away from leaving for other new worlds.
And on top of all this, or maybe because of all this, the planet is waking up from its billion year slumber.
While that all sounds really good, which it is, the telling of this story just drags on and on and on and on. This book would have been way, way better if it had lost a few hundred pages. And on top of all that, it’s a really depressing story from beginning to end, showing up Homo sapiens at their very worse.
It was so tedious i kept on having to take breaks and read three whole books just to break this up into manageable chunks of depressive dragging on.
Let’s hope the next one, Nemesis Games, is better, eh?

Another side story, this time concerning the prisoners that the Belters captured from the original Protogen project in
I didn’t find this book as good as the previous ones, which i put down to a character thing.
The second full length novel in
After a few little novellas it’s been a joy to get into some real long distance reading: it’s a rather large book!
This story occurs immediately after Holden makes his announcement that the ice hauler was destroyed and a piece of tech with a Mars stamp on it was discovered.
Another back story for one of the series main characters. This time it’s Fred Johnson’s turn as we look back at the events of Anderson Station and how they shape his future self.
Book 2 in The Expanse saga.
In the anthology,