

Using this tag allows more people to participate. Every day, we welcome new community members who have just started reading or watching, or are thinking of starting, and it's important that they can count on knowing which threads are safe to read. Posts like this are especially good for discussing the Expanse universe at the time when the books/show begin, spoiler-free questions about the science (physics, biology, linguistics and more) of The Expanse, and other general topics interesting to people no matter where they are in the show or books. No plot spoilers for either the books or the show are allowed, even behind tags. OP has flaired this thread with "Absolutely No Spoilers in Post or Comments." This means that they intend this post to be safe for everyone, including totally new community members. Disappointing or what is the general thought on this?

Thoughts on wrapping up after six? That's a really good run.and maybe didn't want to dilute the product. They did six seasons in rrelating to six of the books. More importantly.are they worth reading along with the books?įinally.a quick question about the show. The short stories and novellas? Should I loop these in? Read that 'Strange Dogs' may be the only one adapted for the show. I've seen a couple posts saying where each is that, so I'll likely follow that. Looks like there is some overlap on books to seasons. My question is.what do you think the best way to do this is? My plan is to read through each book and then watch up until that point.

THE EXPANSE STREAMING CRACK
Currently have a copy of that hot pink anniversary edition 'Leviathan Wakes' ready to crack open right after I finish up a couple other books that I am just about done with. Finally getting around to The Expanse series. The Expanse is smart, intriguing drama for sci-fi fans and perfect for whole-family watching with teens and up.Love everything about sci-fi. There's class warfare (Earth denizens are the "haves" the Belters working out in the asteroids the "have-nots"), a pulpy detective plot line, space-exploring derring-do, political intrigue, and, tying it all together, overarching environmental issues (for example, how are we going to take care of all these humans?) that ring familiar to modern viewers. Characters are complex and act in unexpected (yet recognizably human) ways the view gets a sense that these are not only actors mouthing move-the-plot-along lines but real people living lives we can scarcely conceive of. We've met many of the characters in The Expanse before - the conflicted cop, the politico who does terrible things to keep even more terrible stuff from happening - and we're familiar with dramas that basically boil down to someone having a doomsday device, which this does.īut the fine writing here makes the usual unusual.
THE EXPANSE STREAMING CRACKED
But this time, the network may have cracked the code. Since that well-regarded drama ended, Syfy has continually tried to recapture its magic, usually to no avail. Soap operas in space are a dime a dozen, particularly after the success of Battlestar Galactica. Smart, beautifully written, and intriguingly sketchy on details, this sci-fi drama rises above the usual with well-thought-out details and deft characterization. What the three don't know yet is that Mao's disappearance is connected to a conspiracy that doesn't only threaten life on Earth but will have consequences for every human life in the galaxy.

official Chrisjen Avasarala ( Shohreh Aghdashloo) is investigating radicals on Mars. Meanwhile, on the asteroid Ceres, Detective Miller ( Thomas Jane) is given an assignment to find Julie Andromeda Mao (Florence Faivre), the daughter of a wealthy asteroid belt CEO, who's gone missing and is feared kidnapped and on Earth, U.N. Water and air are more precious than diamonds or gold, and it's during an ice-harvesting run when James Holden ( Steven Strait), captain of ice freighter Canterbury, is involved in an incident that causes nearly its entire crew to be wiped out. Now, galactic peace is administered by the U.N., and humans live mainly in three areas: Earth, Mars, and the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Two hundreds years from now, Earth has colonized THE EXPANSE between us and the sun.
