One of the
things Ty Franck and Daniel Abraham’s Expanse series of novels to
date have done very well is to highlight the internal human conflicts
which may or may not lead to physical violence. I wanted to write
the words “racial tension” instead of “internal human
conflicts”, but it’s a difficult thing to say given the fact the
setting is in fact one big milieu of race. Belter, Martian,
Terran—geographical lines not skin color are the social lines which
have foremost segregated humanity on its march toward the stars, and
attempts at coming to terms with a universe in which humanity is not
the only sentient life. Emphasizing these social lines in a tightly
confined, inhospitable setting is the Expanse’s fourth novel,
Cibola Burn
(2014).
According to
wikipedia, Cibola is the Spanish name of the first region conquered
by Vasquez on his bloody march across the Americas in search of gold.
A portentous name for a novel, indeed the plot that plays out
features a small but technologically advanced group arriving on the
scene of a larger group of primitives. In Expanse terms, this
equates to a UN scientific expedition, complete with a small security
force, arriving on one of the new planets the protomolecule ring has
given humanity access to and finding a small group of Belter
squatters there mining lithium. Conflict erupting quickly on
Inis/New Terra, James Holden (and crew, natch) are called in to
mediate the situation as diplomats. Terrorist elements among the
Belters and an antagonistic security leader ensuring tensions stay at
peak, Holden has his work cut out for him. But pushing matters over
the edge is that alien structures on the desert planet, thought long
abandoned, appear to be showing signs of life.
If there is
anything that is classic science fiction, it may be the setup of
Cibola Burn;
factions of humanity clash while a wild card of mysterious alien
origin plays games, changing the rules of the human conflict as it
goes. Such stories have been written for decades, and Franck and
Abraham do a good job of keeping the human elements (i.e. the
ideology of the conflict) realistic and relatable, while still
allowing the mystery of the alien object to escalate plot into a
unpredictable, dramatic climax.
As
has been the case with prior Expanse novels, viewpoints are split
among a handful of characters. In Cibola
Burn, a couple side characters
from prior novels come to the forefront, and a couple new characters
are added. Miller’s sidekick in Leviathan
Wakes, John Havelock returns as
a security officer in Cibola
Burn, and spends the majority of
the novel in orbit above Inis/New Terra, watching his hostile
security leader create more of a problem than solve. His son one of
those killed by Dr. Strickland in Caliban’s
War, Basia Merton has taken what
remains of his family to Inis in Cibola
Burn, hoping to make a new life
for them. From his perspective, the UN science expedition threatens
to take away everything he and his community have struggled to build
on the planet to date. Elvi Okoye is one of the scientists arriving.
An exobiologist, her passion for science is interrupted by the
constant conflict around her, that is, until her knowledge actually
has an impact on the situation. And of course, Holden, his crew, and
Miller make a return. Everyday a struggle to remain impartial,
Holden nevertheless proves he can wear a diplomat hat also, but not
without a little help from what remains of the
The
Belter-Martian-Earther conflict a constant source of conflict in
Expanse novels to date, in Cibola
Burn it comes front and center,
providing the source of tension. A colonial story, an American
story, and a Cibola story, it’s a fight over land rights, power,
and authority akin to the British Empire, American government, and
Vasqua de Gomez’s expansions. No group inherently good or evil,
however, the UN believes it’s doing the right thing by prioritizing
science on the new planet while the Belters are just trying to
protect the source of their livelihood from what they perceive to be
corporate interests. This and other layers of story allow Abraham
and Franck to tell both sides of the classic colonial story without
painting one side inherently evil.
In the end,
Cibola Burn
is a nice change of pace for the series. Most action occurring
planet-side among a small, confined group of people, the massive
space battles, super soldiers, and space station action which defined
most of the prior novels are absent. Abraham and Franck instead
nicely taking a classic sf scenario and playing it out in Expanse
terms, they push the overarching story of the Expanse ahead by
pulling back a little more of the veil over the protomolecule while
continuing to feed my crack addiction (aka The Expanse series).
Given the social conflict that is at the heart of the novel, not to
mention the triumvirate of UN-Belters-aliens that exists, I would say
the novel is extremely Le Guinian.
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