![]() This series manages to build a complex and fascinating story on the scaffolding of traditional science fiction while rejecting many of the genre’s tropes. The characters have no way to understand what they’re dealing with, so they project their own concerns: Why is this happening? Should we fight it? …Can we profit from it? They’re about the people who inhabit this expanded version of our own world and the problems they struggle with.Īnd because this future is so recognizably human, when a decidedly non-human element is injected, you can watch the chaos spread like ripples in a pond. These books are set in space, but they’re not about space. He nearly triggers a war on more than one occasion. He infuriates the more experienced power players, because he just shows up, airing everyone’s dirty laundry. Literally everything he does is above his pay grade. (Which makes a lot more sense when you know that he started as a character in a role-playing game.) He’s a nobody. Whenever he tries to Captain Kirk a situation it blows up in his face and he’s forced to scramble to protect everyone.Ī running joke in the series is that Holden continually manages to find himself right in the middle of whatever’s going on. He reacts with his gut, which often puts himself and his crew in danger. His first reaction to corporate secrets or political maneuvering that puts regular people’s lives in danger is shock and outrage. Holden is always getting in over his head. They’ve all found themselves in the middle of nowhere, with complicated reasons for leaving home. Holden actually gets annoyed when everyone assumes his loyalties are to Earth. Alex comes closest, being fiercely proud of Mars, but more in a “you can take the boy out of Texas” sense. And a few others who drift into their circle over time.īecause of their complicated backgrounds, none of them exhibit the kind of nationalism or patriotism that science fiction sometimes relies on. ![]() Amos is a hard man with no patience for political maneuvering but is fiercely loyal to Naomi. Naomi is a Belter engineer who seems to be running from her revolutionary past. There’s Alex, the country-music-loving wannabe-cowboy Martian pilot. At the start of the series, he’s almost comically naive. Holden is an Earther with no ambition who’s found himself working as the XO of a decaying ice hauler in the belt. Our view into this setting is James Holden and his crew. It was alternately boring and terrifying, and mostly just something you put up with to get paid. Being in space wasn’t magical or awe-inspiring. ![]() The crew of the Nostromo was a bunch of blue-collar long-haul truckers. It reminds me, in the best way, of Alien, and how it rejected the polished future of Star Trek. This is a setting where people’s lives depend on technology, from the top-of-the-line Martian warships to Belter rock-hoppers, held together with duct tape and chewing gum. There are natural echoes of our own colonial history here in the relationship between Earth and her former colony, as well as in how they both treat the chaotic wild west of the Belt.Īll the technology feels like a natural near-term evolution of our own. I’m fascinated by the complex dynamics described by these books, and how entirely plausible it feels. They chafe under the oppressive thumb of the “Inners,” but struggle to unite under a common banner. The Belters’ lives are entirely defined by limited resources, especially air and water. Mars is a former colony of Earth but declared independence in a war that left them with a chip on their shoulders and the strongest navy in the system. Add to this volatile mix a cosmic wild card that threatens to destroy everything, and you’ve got the recipe for some of the best hard sci-fi I’ve ever read.Įarth is rich in resources but overpopulated and struggling with environmental collapse. Corey, is set in a near future where we’ve settled the solar system, but simmering tension between Earth, Mars, and the Asteroid Belt could boil over into war at any moment.
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