Thirty years have passed between the end of Babylon's Ashes and the beginning of Persepolis Rising, making most of the crew of the Rocinante at least in their seventies. This narrative also brings with it some unique adaptation challenges for the Amazon television series. The history that usually gets rewritten by the victors. Persepolis Rising feels like the story of the necessarily messy history between A and B. History is full of grey, contradictions, and passionate people with good intentions committing atrocities for their causes. There are good and bad people on multiple sides of every argument. That rise to power is fraught with great and terrible things. We are now nearing the end of the long Expanse arc that began with Leviathan Wakes in 2011, and it is thrilling to see where we're heading.Īs far as the story goes: The only constant is change, and empires aren’t built overnight. I assumed that the pace was going to quicken, since Persepolis Rising is moving us into the final three Expanse novels, but I am in awe at how much this book moved the series forward from where we left off in Babylon’s Ashes. "Your empire's hands look a lot cleaner when you get to dictate where history begins, and what parts of it count."
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