Expanse Tom 4 Goraczka Ciboli

Polish language

Published March 18, 2018

ISBN:
978-83-66065-30-7
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4 stars (20 reviews)

Cibola Burn is a 2014 science fiction novel by James S. A. Corey (pen name of Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck) and the fourth book in The Expanse series. It follows the crew of the Rocinante as they join the flood of humanity out into the galaxy, using the gates built by the ancient civilization that also produced the protomolecule. At the release of Cibola Burn, Orbit Books announced that James S. A. Corey would write three additional books in the series (adding to two that were already planned) to bring the series to nine novels and various short stories. Cibola Burn serves as the basis for the fourth season of the television series The Expanse, which was released by Amazon Video December 13, 2019.

8 editions

reviewed Cibola Burn by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #4)

A great display of hard sci fi

5 stars

As with every book from The Expanse that I have read before this one, the authors do a great job of imagining a possible future for humanity and to take those premises to places that feel extremely plausible.

Also, murder mystery on a galactic scale, which is always nice. Looking forward to the next one!

Review of 'Cibola Burn' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

To tell the truth, I was saddened to see the Expanse universe expanded beyond our minuscule solar system. I really loved the limited scope of the first books, where you had people trying to fight a vast incomprehensible menace when they could hardly manage their own system.

But this book has pacified me a bit. The colonists in this story are limited as well; in fact, this one's even more limited than the first books were. I like that. It gives me hope that this series won't end up with humanity being a huge advanced civilization akin to the very one they're trying to find/investigate.

(spoiler for 2001: a Space Odyssey) That's possibly the only thing I didn't like about the 2001 book (the movie was terrible in regards to explaining things to the viewer, so I'll pretend it didn't exist): the transcendence of humanity. I get that the whole …

reviewed Cibola Burn by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #4)

Review of 'Cibola Burn' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

The longest it took me to finish a Expanse novel so far. Meanders a lot, and doesn't get to the point till the very end. The ending was surprisingly well done, but the remainder was just meh.

Kept going through it, since the reviews for the next couple of books are great and I really want to read them.