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Loading... The Sins of Our Fathersby James S. A. Corey
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This is the last Expanse novella, and also the last Expanse book full stop, to my knowledge anyway. I think there was a plan for the short fiction collection, Memory's Legion, to contain an exclusive piece, but this didn't come to pass in the end. It's a coda to the series, showing us what one particular colony got up to after Leviathan Falls, and one particular character, who we last saw back in Babylon's Ashes. At first it didn't grab me—kind of action-y, kind of slow—but the last third made me sit up and pay attention in a way that made me think I ought to have been paying more attention all along, and wasn't giving the story its due. So, if I ever get Memory's Legion, I look forward to rereading it. https://www.instagram.com/p/Cdt8sXIrcnJ/ James S.A. Corey - The Sins of Our Fathers: Surprisingly satisfying, with a glimpse of the inner life of a not-so-favorite character, to boot. #cursorybookreviews #cursoryreviews no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesThe Expanse (novella) Is contained in
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HTML: The final novella set in the universe of James S. A. Corey's NYT-bestselling Expanse series. Now a Prime Original series. This story will be available in the complete Expanse story collection, Memory's Legion.
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Jannah is one of the newly colonized worlds reached by humanity through the ring gates system, whose collapse has now isolated those worlds from the rest of the galaxy. The colonists on Jannah have so far been dealing - like everyone else in their same situation - with the uncertainty of cut communications, dwindling supplies and lack of replacement parts, when a new problem surfaces: some previously unknown creatures have been attacking the settlement, and their defenses might not hold much longer. The group of colonists is of two minds about how to cope: stay and keep defending themselves, or relocate the village in a different area, and tempers rise in the confrontation, opening the way for the strong and ruthless to impose their will.
One of the stranded colonists is an old acquaintance: Filip, the son of Naomi Nagata of the murderous leader of the Free Navy Marco Inaros. He’s a few decades older than the last time we saw him, and he’s been living a nomadic life since then, haunted by the guilt for his actions when he was his father’s lieutenant, and trying to keep as low a profile as possible.
His past was like a wound that wouldn’t heal, he’d spent his life dodging justice that might not even have been looking for him except in his head. That had been enough to break him.
Once Filip recognizes in fellow castaway Jandro the signs of the man’s narcissistic thirst for power that were at the roots of his father’s character, he understands that history might repeat itself and the ghosts of the past come knocking at his door once again…
Despite the dreary, almost hopeless atmosphere of this short story, I enjoyed very much the character study at its core: humanity manages again to show its failings and its inability to learn from the mistakes of the past (the sins of the fathers mentioned in the title). We see the bully Jandro understand that the lack of laws and organizations able to implement them have left a door open for a show of force and the possibility of seizing power; we also see how people deprived of self-esteem, or agency, tend to attach themselves to such individuals as Jandro, giving in to their basest instincts to gain the leader’s approval. It’s a scenery with which Filip is quite familiar, one which has the effect of reopening the emotional scars he’s still carrying after so long.
When we last saw him, Filip was a teenager, confused, lost, oppressed by guilt - and more important eager to distance himself from the looming figure of his deadly charismatic father: the choice to take on his mother’s surname - Nagata - his way of expressing a willingness to cut the ties with that past. And yet, at the start of the story, Filip is still running from that past, and from himself: until now, when things became unbearable, or too comfortable, he always moved on and left without turning back, in a form of self-inflicted punishment:
[…] if anything ever went right for him, if he ever seemed in danger of gaining something he might be able to keep, he ran.
Now, with the collapse of the gates system, that possibility is gone forever, and that’s probably the reason he finally takes a stand – a way to avoid history repeating itself and of atoning for his own sins. It might not be a true redemption (not considering the way things develop) but it’s the beginning - the hope - of one. And it’s enough.
The Sins of the Fathers might very well be our last chance to visit the Expanse universe, but it’s a quietly moving, very satisfactory one. Even though I keep hoping that the authors might still have something in store for us in the future… ( )