Leviathan Falls (The Expanse, 9) by James S. A. Corey
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Leviathan Falls (The Expanse, 9)

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The biggest science fiction series of the decade comes to an incredible conclusion in the ninth and final novel in James S.A. Corey’s Hugo-award winning space opera that inspired the Prime Original series.

Hugo Award Winner for Best Series

The Laconian Empire has fallen, setting the thirteen hundred solar systems free from the rule of Winston Duarte. But the ancient enemy that killed the gate builders is awake, and the war against our universe has begun again.

In the dead system of Adro, Elvi Okoye leads a desperate scientific mission to understand what the gate builders were and what destroyed them, even if it means compromising herself and the half-alien children who bear the weight of her investigation. Through the wide-flung systems of humanity, Colonel Aliana Tanaka hunts for Duarte’s missing daughter. . . and the shattered emperor himself. And on the Rocinante, James Holden and his crew struggle to build a future for humanity out of the shards and ruins of all that has come before.

As nearly unimaginable forces prepare to annihilate all human life, Holden and a group of unlikely allies discover a last, desperate chance to unite all of humanity, with the promise of a vast galactic civilization free from wars, factions, lies, and secrets if they win.

But the price of victory may be worse than the cost of defeat.

"Interplanetary adventure the way it ought to be written." —George R. R. Martin

The Expanse

  • Leviathan Wakes
  • Caliban's War
  • Abaddon's Gate
  • Cibola Burn
  • Nemesis Games
  • Babylon's Ashes
  • Persepolis Rising
  • Tiamat's Wrath
  • Leviathan Falls

Memory's Legion

The Expanse Short Fiction

  • Drive
  • The Butcher of Anderson Station
  • Gods of Risk
  • The Churn
  • The Vital Abyss
  • Strange Dogs
  • Auberon
  • The Sins of Our Fathers

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ISBN-10

0316332941

ISBN-13

978-0316332941

Print length

560 pages

Language

English

Publisher

Orbit

Publication date

February 06, 2023

Dimensions

6 x 1.7 x 9.25 inches

Item weight

1.25 pounds



Popular Highlights in this book

  • When people don’t know anything, Amos said, they love having meetings to talk about it.

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  • We’re scientists. We only know things until someone shows us we’re wrong.

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  • The dysfunctions and idiosyncrasies of childhood became the self-evident norms of adulthood.

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ASIN :

B08Y8LBCLH

File size :

1866 KB

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Editorial Reviews

“An all-time genre classic.”―Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"The ending is equal parts heart-wrenching and hopeful, and it’s what Abraham and Franck have been building toward for more than a decade."―Polygon

"Corey deftly weaves multiple points of view to create a dense and colorful tapestry of political intrigue, personal relationships, and sophisticated technology that bursts with action but also delivers an introspective view of the characters as they age and reflect on their purpose and the value of their lives."―Booklist (starred review) on Tiamat's Wrath

"The science fictional equivalent of A Song of Ice and Fire...only with fewer beheadings and way more spaceships." ―NPR Books on Cibola Burn

"Combining an exploration of real human frailties with big SF ideas and exciting thriller action, Corey cements the series as must-read space opera." ―Library Journal (starred review) on Cibola Burn

"It's been too long since we've had a really kickass space opera. Leviathan Wakes is interplanetary adventure the way it ought to be written, the kind of SF that made me fall in love with the genre way back when, seasoned with a dollop of horror and a dash of noir. Jimmy Corey writes with the energy of a brash newcomer and the polish of a seasoned pro. So where's the second book?" ―George R. R. Martin on Leviathan Wakes

"An excellent space operatic debut in the grand tradition of Peter F. Hamilton." ―Charles Stross on Leviathan Wakes

"Literary space opera at its absolute best." ―io9 on Abaddon's Gate

"Riveting interplanetary thriller."―Publishers Weekly on Leviathan Wakes

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Sample

Prologue

First there was a man named Winston Duarte. And then there wasn’t.

The last moment had been banal. He’d been in his private study at the heart of the State Building, sitting on his divan. His desk—Laconian rainwood, with a grain like sedimentary rock—had an inset screen showing the thousand different reports vying for his attention. The clockwork of the empire ground slowly forward, with every revolution of the wheel making the mechanism a little smoother and more precise. He’d been reviewing the security reports from Auberon, where the governor, responding to separatist violence, had begun recruiting locals into the system security forces. His own daughter, Teresa, had been on one of her illicit adventures outside the grounds. The solitary nature hikes which she believed to be outside the watchful eye of Laconian Security were developmentally important for her, and he looked on them with not only indulgence but pride.

He had only recently told her about his ambitions for her: to join him as Paolo Cortázar’s second patient, to have her awareness opened and deepened as his had been, to live perhaps not forever but at least indefinitely. A hundred years from now, they would still be guiding the human empire. A thousand. Ten thousand years.

If.

That was the terrible pressure behind it all. The overwhelming if. If he could push back against the human habit of complacence. If he could convince the vast, incoherent scrum that was humanity that they had to take action to avoid the fate of their predecessors. Either they did whatever it took to understand and defeat the darkness on the third side of the ring gate, or they died at its hand.

The experiments in Tecoma system were like all the critical steps that had come throughout human history. Ever since the first mammal decided to rise on its hind legs to see above the grass. If it worked, it would change everything again. Everything changed everything that had come before. It was the least surprising thing in life.

He had reached for his tea in those last moments, but noticed through one of the weird new senses Dr. Cortázar had given him that the pot had already gone cold. The awareness of molecular vibration was analogous to the physical sensation of heat—it measured the same material reality—but the merely human sense was like a child playing a whistle compared with Duarte’s vast, symphonic new awareness.

The last moment came.

In the instant between deciding to call his valet for a fresh pot of tea and then reaching his hand out for the comm controls, the mind of Winston Duarte blew apart like a pile of straw in a hurricane.

There was pain—a great deal of pain—and there was fear. But there wasn’t anyone left to feel it, so it faded quickly. There was no consciousness, no pattern, no one to think the thoughts that swelled and dimmed. Something more delicate—more graceful, more sophisticated—would have died. The narrative chain that thought of itself as Winston Duarte was ripped to pieces, but the flesh that housed him wasn’t. The subtle flows of energy in his body fell into a storm of invisible turbulence, whipped past coherence. And then, without anyone being aware of it, they began to slow and still.

His thirty trillion cells still took in oxygen from the complex fluid that had been his blood. Those structures that were his neurons fell into association with each other like drinking buddies bending their elbows in unconscious synchrony. Something was that hadn’t been. Not the old thing, but a pattern that took up residence in the empty space it left behind. Not the dancer, but a dance. Not the water, but a whirlpool. Not a person. Not a mind. But something.

When awareness returned, it first appeared in colors. Blue, but without the words for blueness. Then red. Then a white that also meant something. The fragment of an idea. Snow.

Joy came to be, and it lasted longer than fear had. A deep, bubbling sense of wonder carried itself along without anything to carry it. Patterns rose and fell, came together and came apart. The few that fell apart more slowly sometimes came into relationship with each other, and sometimes that made them last even longer.

Like a baby slowly mapping touch and sight and kinesthesis into something not yet called “foot,” scraps of awareness touched the universe and something like understanding began to form. Something felt its own lumbering, brute physicality as it pushed chemicals into the vast gaps between cells. It felt the raw, open vibration that surrounded the ring gates that connected the worlds, and it thought of sores and ulcerations. It felt something. It thought something. It remembered how to remember, and then it forgot.

There had been a reason, a goal. Something had justified atrocities in order to avoid worse ones. He had betrayed his nation. He had conspired against billions. He had condemned people who were loyal to him to death. There had been a reason. He remembered it. He forgot. He rediscovered the glorious brilliance of yellow and devoted himself to the pure experience of that.

He heard voices as symphonies. He heard them as quacks. He was surprised to find that a he existed and that it was him. There was something he was supposed to do. Save humanity. Something ridiculously grand like that.

He forgot.

Come back. Daddy, come back to me.

Like when she’d been a baby and he had slept at her side, he refocused on her by habit. His daughter mewled, and he roused himself so that his wife wouldn’t have to. His hand was in hers. She’d said something. He couldn’t remember the words, so he looked backward in time to where she spoke them. Dr. Cortázar? He’s going to kill me.

That didn’t seem right. He didn’t know why. The storm in the other place was loud and soft and loud. That was connected. He was supposed to save them from the things in the storm, that were the storm. Or from their own too-human nature. But his daughter was there, and she was interesting. He could see the distress flowing through her brain, through her body. The pain in her blood scented the air around her, and he wanted. He wanted to soothe her, to comfort her. He wanted to make right everything that was wrong for her. But more interesting, for the first time, he wanted.

The strange sensation of feeling these things plucked at his attention, and his focus drifted. He held her hand and wandered. When he came back, he was still holding her hand, but she was someone else. We just need to scan you, sir. It won’t hurt. He remembered Dr. Cortázar. He’s going to kill me. He waved Cortázar away, pushing at the empty spaces between the tiny motes that made him a physical thing until the man swirled like dust. There. That was fixed. But the effort tired him and made his body ache. He gave himself permission to drift, but even so, he noticed that the drift was less. His nervous system was shattered, but it kept growing together. His body kept insisting that even if it couldn’t go on, it could go on. He admired this stubborn refusal to die as if it were something outside of himself. The sheer mindless and physical impulse to move forward, each cell’s determination to churn along, the obdurate need to continue existing that didn’t even require a will. All of it meant something. It was important. He just had to remember how. It had to do with his daughter. It had to do with keeping her safe and well.

He remembered. He remembered being a man who loved his child, and so he remembered being a man. And that was a stronger rope than the ambition that had built an empire. He remembered that he had made himself something different than a human. Something more. And he understood how this alien strength had also weakened him. How the brutish and unapologetic clay of his body had kept him from annihilation. The sword that slew a billion angels had only inconvenienced the primates in their bubbles of metal and air. And a man named Winston Duarte, halfway between angel and ape, had been broken but not killed. The shards had found their own way.

There was someone else too. A man with dry riverbeds in his mind. Another man who had been changed. James Holden, the enemy who had shared his enemy, back before Winston Duarte had broken, and in breaking, become.

With infinite effort and care, he pulled the unbearable vastness and complexity of his awareness in and in and in, compressing himself into what he had been. The blue faded into the color he had known as a man. The sense of the storm raging just on the other side, of the violence and threat, faded. He felt the warm, iron-smelling meat of his hand, holding nothing. He opened his eyes, turned to the comm controls, and opened a connection.

“Kelly,” he said. “Could you bring me a fresh pot of tea?”

The pause was less than might have been expected, under the circumstances. “Yes, sir,” Kelly said.

“Thank you.” Duarte dropped the connection.

A medical bed had been put in his study with an aerated foam mattress to prevent bedsores, but he was seated at his desk as if he had never left it. He took stock of his body, noticing its weakness. The thinness of its muscles. He stood, clasped his hands behind him, and walked to the window to see whether he could. He could.

Outside, a light, tapping rain was falling. There were puddles on the walkways and the grass was bright and clean. He reached out for Teresa, and he found her. She wasn’t nearby, but she wasn’t in distress. It was like watching her traipse through the wilds again, only without the artificial lens of the cameras. His love and indulgence for her was vast. Oceanic. But it wasn’t pressing. The truest expression of his love was his work, and so he turned to it as if this were any other day.

Duarte pulled up an executive summary the way he had at the start of every morning. Normally it was a page long. This one was a full volume. He sorted by category, pulling out the thread that addressed the status of traffic through the ring space. Things had, putting it mildly, gone poorly in his absence. Scientific reports of the loss of Medina Station and the Typhoon. Military analyses of the siege of Laconia, the loss of the construction platforms. Intelligence summaries of the growing opposition in the widely scattered systems of humanity, and of Admiral Trejo’s attempts to hold the dream of the empire together without him.

There had been a time not long after her mother passed when Teresa had decided to make him breakfast. She had been so young, so incapable, that she had failed. He remembered the crust of bread heaping with jam and a pat of unmelted butter perched on top of it. The combination of ambition and affection and pathos had been beautiful in its way. It was the kind of memory that survived because the love and the embarrassment fit together so perfectly. This felt the same.

His awareness of the ring space was clear now. He could hear the echoes of it in the fabric of reality like he was pressing his ear to a ship’s deck to know the status of its drive. The rage of the enemy was as apparent to him now as if he could hear its voices. The shrieks that tore something that wasn’t air in something that wasn’t time.

“Admiral Trejo,” he said, and Anton startled.

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About the authors

James S. A. Corey

James S. A. Corey

James S. A. Corey is the pen name of fantasy author Daniel Abraham, author of the critically acclaimed Long Price Quartet, and writer Ty Franck. They both live in Albuquerque, New Mexico.


Reviews

Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5

25,849 global ratings

Michael Lynn McGuire

Michael Lynn McGuire

5

Book number nine of an nine book science fiction series

Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2024

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Book number nine of an nine book science fiction series. I read the well printed and well bound trade paperback weighing 1.3 lbs published by Orbit in 2023. Ah, Science Fiction by the pound, cool ! This book is the end of the series as far as I know. BTW, James S. A. Corey is two guys writing under a single nom de plume.

James Holden has escaped from the fallen empire of Laconia. The ancient central station with the 1,300 gates, shortcuts around the Milky Way, is a free for all now. But, somebody else has awakened and wants to destroy everything. And the leader of Laconia, Winston Duarte, has turned up at the central station.

I really enjoyed the series. It was almost hard science fiction if you skip the protomolecule and the central station at the edge of the Solar System.

You can watch books one through six converted to a six season tv series on Amazon Prime. The series was started on the Syfy channel and moved to Amazon for the fourth season.

My rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

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Justin Hegan

Justin Hegan

5

So…what now?

Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2024

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I held off as long as possible because I didn’t want it to end, but here I am.

The entire series is well written. Descriptive enough to visualize this world in the minds eye but also concise and not overly florid. Having watched the show (many times lol) also helps.

The end was interesting but it left me with more questions than answers. What exactly happened during the thousand year jump forward? How did everyone fare and tell me more about this 30 worlds. Nothing can quite replace the Roci and her original crew, but surely other larger than life characters are waiting to have their stories told over a thousand year span.

There’s also a thirty year gap that I wouldn’t mind reading about. Thirty years is certainly a lot of time for plenty of adventures. While I understand the writers wanting to branch out, it seems to me that this particular universe they’ve created has barely scratched the surface, and there are still stories to be told and more adventures to be had.

It’s rare to find such a compelling story and I’m selfish and greedy for more.

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Christine Philben

Christine Philben

5

Great read

Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2024

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Fitting ending to a great series of books. Hope there will be more. Will be tough to top this. Thanks to the Authors!

Aunt Carol

Aunt Carol

5

Becoming real

Reviewed in the United States on July 30, 2024

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The amazing people in this alternate universe have such incredible warmth and depth. We watch them grow and change in front of us, each one different, each one remaining themselves through adversity and joy. Thank you for bringing them to life

Patrick M. Hayes

Patrick M. Hayes

5

A fitting end to an awesome epic. [No spoilers]

Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2022

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It's always a strange feeling to finish a long series of books that has entertained, enlightened, and inspired you over years of your life, sometimes even decades. The stories are like a part of your history, the characters like friends you've joyously reunited with again and again. There's a unique excitement in a new book coming out in a series you love, afterwards followed by years of extensive discussion and anticipation for the next book, for those of us fortunate enough to be involved with communities of fans . But eventually, that next book will be the last one.

I started reading Robert Jordan's "The Wheel of Time" in 1997, when I was in high school. WoT and the wonderful community of fellow fans who'd become like a family to me saw me graduate high school, struggle through some very difficult years, then go to college, followed by law school. The final book in the series came out while I was working my first job post-law school, a few months after I graduated. I read that book with both love and sorrow, because a part of my life was ending, something I had been able to look forward to for fifteen years. After I finished it, my life was different.

The same thing goes for The Expanse. I've been flying around with the crew of the Roci for eleven years, many of which were very hard times; this series helped keep me sane and hopeful in those times. When the book finally appeared on my Kindle, I felt some trepidation, because I didn't want this story to end. I had pre-ordered it what feels like ages ago, and actually forgot it was coming up until it was there, downloaded. I read the first couple of chapters, and then I stopped because, as always seems to happen, real life intruded on my reading-for-fun.

I didn't pick it back up until around the end of November, 2022; I tried to parcel it out gradually, so I could spend as much time as possible with these old frirnds. And now it's over, and once again my life is different.

But, it was very well worth the journey. Leviathan Falls is a fitting and satisfactory conclusion to what I personally feel is the best science fiction series, so far, of the last twenty years, and indeed one of the best series in all of speculative fiction. The authors have done an excellent job of wrapping almost everything up. The biggest plot threads get a suitably epic send-off.

The only thing I found wanting was a few minor loose ends from the series that either didn't get a mention at all, or were concluded off-screen and barely registered in the story (coincidentally, I felt the same about the final Wheel of Time book). All in all, however, it was excellent, as we've come to expect from this series. Reading the last couple of chapters had me crying by the end.

Perhaps I get "too involved" with books, if a series' ending can hit me with such strong feelings, but books and the worlds in them have always been dear to me. And truthfully, it's not all over; there will still be discussions, and rereads, and speculation, and most importantly, inspiration to share with folks just starting out with the series.

So, if you're a fan of the series, although you may feel sad that the series is finished, I'll bet that you'll very much enjoy the end of the journey.

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