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A novella set in the universe of James S. A. Corey's NYT-bestselling Expanse series, Auberon explores a new and alien world and the age-old dangers that humanity has carried with it to the stars. Now a Prime Original series.Hugo Award Winner for Best Series
Auberon is one of the first and most important colony worlds in humanity's reach, and the new conquering faction has come to claim it. Governor Rittenaur has come to bring civilization and order to the far outpost and guarantee the show more wealth and power of the Empire.
But Auberon already has its own history, a complex culture, and a criminal kingpin named Erich with very different plans. In a world of deceit, violence, and corruption, the greatest danger Rittenaur faces is love.
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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The most recent Expanse novella was published after Tiamat's Wrath, but takes place before it, so that's where I read it. This is one of the weaker ones, I'm afraid, though perhaps it will set up something in Tiamat's Wrath that will make me appreciate it more in retrospect. It's about a Laconian governor coming to grips with the difficulty of maintaining power outside of Laconia; too many of its beats seemed duplicated from the Governor Singh plotline in Persepolis Rising. They both struggle to apply their ideals in practice, they both have a situation spiral out of control, they both are devoted to wives in ways that make them impossible to live up to, they both are ultimately compromised. I liked the Singh subplot in Persepolis show more Rising a lot, but not so much that I had any interest in seeing it play out again in the very next book. show less
Getting a new Expanse novella while I wait for the next (and last…) book in line feels like a way of shortening that waiting time, and it’s always a joy going back to that universe, even when the main characters I’ve come to know and love are not part of the story.
Auberon’s time-line is set somewhere between the last two published books, Persepolis Rising and Tiamat’s Wrath, as the Laconian forces are tightening their hold on the occupied planets: governor Biryar Rittenaur and his wife Mona have been charged with the running of Auberon, one of the most Earth-like colony worlds behind the Ring gate, and like all Laconians Rittenaur is very focused on his mission, on the ideals of order and civilization that High Consul Duarte show more uses to advertise his merciless military conquest.
While Rittenaur and his staff expect the usual resistance - more or less overt - against what is in truth an occupation force, no matter the mask it wears, they are not ready to face the deeply rooted system of criminal corruption headed by a man named Erich whose reach into Auberon’s society goes quite far, and who is not ready to give in to the self-styled new masters of humanity. The new governor will soon discover that it’s not easy to keep faith with one’s ideals when they are in direct conflict with what he holds most dear - or as Erich tells him at some point: “Ideological purity never survives contact with the enemy.”
The description of “old man” Erich, with his prosthetic arm covering for a malformed one, is a very intriguing one because it connects with a character I already encountered first in the novella The Churn (the one about Amos’ past) and then in the full novel Nemesis Games, where again Amos and Erich’s shared past came to the surface. If you read both of them, you will find that the present story gains even more depth, but even without this kind of information, Auberon remains an intriguing snippet in the overall Expanse background, because as usual the characters and their journey are at the core of it all.
What makes the two main characters in this novella interesting is that neither of them is likable, and at the same time neither of them is utterly despicable: we are made privy to their motivations, and from their point of view they are acting for the good of the people under their authority. Erich is a crime lord, and there is no measure of white-washing that can make us forget he’s a gangster ruling his territory with a blood-drenched iron fist (no pun intended here…), but he’s also fighting - in his own way and for his own purposes - against an invader bent on ruling the galaxy, so it’s difficult not to root for him, at least a little bit. Rittenaur is the voice and arm of the conquerors, people who use other humans as guinea pigs for protomolecule alterations, people who execute their own as an example against mistakes, but he’s also a man with a deep love for integrity and a sincere belief in the good of the “Laconian dream” - he’s a decent man, very unlike Medina Station’s Governor Singh, and therefore worthy of some sympathy.
In the tried and tested tradition of the Expanse series, Auberon gives us much food for thought and sheds some interesting light on the latter part of the overall story, while we wait for the conclusion of this sweeping space opera saga that for me represents one of the best in the genre. show less
Auberon’s time-line is set somewhere between the last two published books, Persepolis Rising and Tiamat’s Wrath, as the Laconian forces are tightening their hold on the occupied planets: governor Biryar Rittenaur and his wife Mona have been charged with the running of Auberon, one of the most Earth-like colony worlds behind the Ring gate, and like all Laconians Rittenaur is very focused on his mission, on the ideals of order and civilization that High Consul Duarte show more uses to advertise his merciless military conquest.
While Rittenaur and his staff expect the usual resistance - more or less overt - against what is in truth an occupation force, no matter the mask it wears, they are not ready to face the deeply rooted system of criminal corruption headed by a man named Erich whose reach into Auberon’s society goes quite far, and who is not ready to give in to the self-styled new masters of humanity. The new governor will soon discover that it’s not easy to keep faith with one’s ideals when they are in direct conflict with what he holds most dear - or as Erich tells him at some point: “Ideological purity never survives contact with the enemy.”
The description of “old man” Erich, with his prosthetic arm covering for a malformed one, is a very intriguing one because it connects with a character I already encountered first in the novella The Churn (the one about Amos’ past) and then in the full novel Nemesis Games, where again Amos and Erich’s shared past came to the surface. If you read both of them, you will find that the present story gains even more depth, but even without this kind of information, Auberon remains an intriguing snippet in the overall Expanse background, because as usual the characters and their journey are at the core of it all.
What makes the two main characters in this novella interesting is that neither of them is likable, and at the same time neither of them is utterly despicable: we are made privy to their motivations, and from their point of view they are acting for the good of the people under their authority. Erich is a crime lord, and there is no measure of white-washing that can make us forget he’s a gangster ruling his territory with a blood-drenched iron fist (no pun intended here…), but he’s also fighting - in his own way and for his own purposes - against an invader bent on ruling the galaxy, so it’s difficult not to root for him, at least a little bit. Rittenaur is the voice and arm of the conquerors, people who use other humans as guinea pigs for protomolecule alterations, people who execute their own as an example against mistakes, but he’s also a man with a deep love for integrity and a sincere belief in the good of the “Laconian dream” - he’s a decent man, very unlike Medina Station’s Governor Singh, and therefore worthy of some sympathy.
In the tried and tested tradition of the Expanse series, Auberon gives us much food for thought and sheds some interesting light on the latter part of the overall story, while we wait for the conclusion of this sweeping space opera saga that for me represents one of the best in the genre. show less
My library didn't get this until after the final novel was published, so this was my last Expanse read. It doesn't actually have any bearing on Leviathan Falls, so order isn't that important.
Colonialism doesn't really work without corruption. The only logical reasons to conquer distant people are 1) to keep them from conquering you and 2) to take their stuff (resources, goods, labor, tech, ect.). I am leaving out a third reason, religion, because I don't think it meets logical requirement It seems like there would almost always be an easier alternative to #1, like the swiss investing in being hard to conquer and in neutrality to avoid acquiring enemies. That leaves #2. The Laconians seem to want to take stuff from the worlds the show more capture, but for a collective gain that abhors individual enrichment. That can't work. Leopold got rich off the Congo by sending greedy, ruthless mercenaries to run it for him and giving them a cut of what they could loot. Awful, but an effective incentive.
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Colonialism doesn't really work without corruption. The only logical reasons to conquer distant people are 1) to keep them from conquering you and 2) to take their stuff (resources, goods, labor, tech, ect.). I am leaving out a third reason, religion, because I don't think it meets logical requirement It seems like there would almost always be an easier alternative to #1, like the swiss investing in being hard to conquer and in neutrality to avoid acquiring enemies. That leaves #2. The Laconians seem to want to take stuff from the worlds the show more capture, but for a collective gain that abhors individual enrichment. That can't work. Leopold got rich off the Congo by sending greedy, ruthless mercenaries to run it for him and giving them a cut of what they could loot. Awful, but an effective incentive.
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This is a novella in The Expanse series. It's book 8.5, obviously placed between book 8 and the yet to be released book 9.
This novella is fantastically well written and a pure joy to listen to. It involves a new governor arriving at a colony world to implement its place as part of the empire. Things don't go as you (or the colony world) expect. You'll enjoy the way the story plays out. If you have been reading/listening to The Expanse, you won't be disappointed. If you're just watching the TV show, hold off on this. It'll be a few years before the show catches up to the time when this takes place.
This novella is fantastically well written and a pure joy to listen to. It involves a new governor arriving at a colony world to implement its place as part of the empire. Things don't go as you (or the colony world) expect. You'll enjoy the way the story plays out. If you have been reading/listening to The Expanse, you won't be disappointed. If you're just watching the TV show, hold off on this. It'll be a few years before the show catches up to the time when this takes place.
The expanse novellas and short stories take you away from the main action and characters to really build the Expanse universe and show you the inner workings.
7.5 in the Expanse series, Auberon show how the Empire from [b:Persepolis Rising|28335696|Persepolis Rising (The Expanse, #7)|James S.A. Corey|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1481562381l/28335696._SY75_.jpg|48382887] is wielding and enforcing its power through Governors. The Laconian people are upright and pure and hold themselves to a very high moral code. But how will they react with all the corruption around them on the planets they are trying to bring order to? How will they react to bringing a new government to a planet that might not show more want it? What would you do for the people you love?
A very short but wonderful story. I think I like this story more than the main story. show less
7.5 in the Expanse series, Auberon show how the Empire from [b:Persepolis Rising|28335696|Persepolis Rising (The Expanse, #7)|James S.A. Corey|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1481562381l/28335696._SY75_.jpg|48382887] is wielding and enforcing its power through Governors. The Laconian people are upright and pure and hold themselves to a very high moral code. But how will they react with all the corruption around them on the planets they are trying to bring order to? How will they react to bringing a new government to a planet that might not show more want it? What would you do for the people you love?
A very short but wonderful story. I think I like this story more than the main story. show less
A nice short story to tie us over until the next book. But seriously, this is a good message of the way our world is and ...... (no spoilers). Enjoy, a nice read.
Nice novella about the interaction between the conquerors and the conquered...
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Author Information

47+ Works 44,839 Members
James S.A. Corey is the pen name for a collaboration between Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck. James is Daniel's middle name, Corey is Ty's middle name, and S.A. are Daniel's daughter's initials. James' current project is a series of science fiction novels called The Expanse Series. They are also the authors of Honor Among Thieves: Star Wars (Empire show more and Rebellion). (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Canonical title
- Auberon
- Original publication date
- 2019-11-12
- Publisher's editor
- Hinton, Will
Classifications
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- Members
- 295
- Popularity
- 108,959
- Reviews
- 12
- Rating
- (4.02)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 6
- ASINs
- 5
































































