Shorter
review: if you enjoyed Leviathan
Wakes, you’ll definitely enjoy
Caliban’s War
(unless you are a space opera connoisseur, sensitive to the slightest
details that affect a universe—but even then...)
Longer
review: If anything, author duo
Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck’s second entry in The Expanse series
Caliban’s Wake (2012) shows
the success of the first novel was not a fluke. Like Leviathan
Wakes, Caliban’s War is the
perfect genre beach read. Story purpose is always clear, yet often
moves in organic yet unpredictable ways. The characters are on the
right side of 2D, making their plight relatable. And the plotting
between the character viewpoints never allows the narrative to slow,
even when there isn’t any direct conflict on screen.
But Caliban’s
War is not a repeat of Leviathan
Wakes. It takes the characters
from Leviathan
(specifically Holden and crew), plucks a couple key characters from
what was the background of Leviathan,
puts them front and center, then evolves the wider setting to its
next logical point in a story that is an equally entertaining,
page-turning read.
Venus is
being overrun by the protomolecule, and the solar system is starting
to panic. Earth’s government has machinations within machinations,
and Crisjen must use her wits to try and weed out its most malevolent
elements. Trouble is, they may have the drop on her. On Mars, a
crew of marines is wiped out by a new super-soldier unlike the solar
system has never seen, its composition seeming to bear something in
common with the life-force emerging on Venus. One marine surviving
the attack, she makes the trip to Earth to tell her story to the UN.
And on Ganymede, a biologist tries to track down his daughter, a
small girl who seemingly was kidnapped when an army laid waste to the
station. Through these storylines, Holden and his crew try to keep
their heads above water as they move from fray to fray, trying to do
the right thing for humanity and stay alive.
Self-contained
but expansive, Caliban’s War
is like Leviathan Wakes
in that the story has a natural beginning and end, yet leaves enough
open-ended for continuation. The reader can close the book satisfied
and never come back, but for those who want more, there is room. The
books are not literary in intent, but technique is strong. The books
have extremely little fluff, the diction is tight and on point,
pacing is excellent, and there is enough humanity, particularly
moments of human sensitivity, that the reader’s intelligence
doesn’t often feel insulted.
As stated
above, if you liked Leviathan
Wakes, then Caliban’s
War is an easy recommendation.
For me personally, the series is becoming my go-to read when I just
want something light but entertaining that doesn’t condescend
(well, it does in moments—vomit zombies anyone?). If I wanted to
be really honest, I would say it borders on crack-cocaine; when I
finish one, I want to pick up the next—not because of any
cliffhangers, but because the authors have started to build a trust
in me that the product is dependable; the shiny, sexy, flash-bang
sensawunda that science fiction so often aspires to be, awaits. Time
to hit the crack pip—I mean, on to Abaddon’s
Gate…
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