beauf wrote: » Are the books worth reading if you've watched the series.
ixoy wrote: » Funnily enough, I didn't much care for the two books in the series I read but I really love the TV show. I also enjoyed the Long Price Quartet, which is written by Daniel Abraham who is one half of James S.A. Corey. So dunno what it was that was missing for me but I may end up finishing the series via the books.
beauf wrote: » No one is safe around him. Family, friends, allies never mind enemies. The reverse is also true. Everyone sees him as a threat, and will take him out at the first opportunity. That's said the Expanse is rarely predictable.
beauf wrote: » The series implies the belt is not self-sufficient. At least that was my understanding. Hence any issues around Ganymede etc. Have far reaching implications. If the belt is self- sufficient there is no reason to be dependent on earth. Which is a core premise of the TV show. Which then has implications for Marcos strategy and his future plans, whatever they are. With Mars its just a too simplistic that its culture just vanishes. We know from human history that rarely does a cultural identity just disappear so fast even after massive events.
saneman wrote: » Belters could be self sufficient (at a basic level anyway) if given the opportunity to govern themselves were they not under the heel of Earth/Mars. From the outset we see they're also beholden to the corporations that own/run the facilities that provide food/air/water and those that process the resources that brought humanity out there in the first place.
saneman wrote: » With Mars it's not that their culture has just vanished but it has been fundamentally undermined because of the ring gates and its most precious resource, its people, are leaving. Why stay & toil in the hope that your great-grandchildren will experience a world with atmosphere when there are uncolonised planets suddenly available for all to inhabit. And those that do stay suddenly have a much greater & longer challenge ahead.