
Leviathan Wakes (The Expanse Book 1) Review
4.2 / 5
Overall Rating

Leviathan Wakes — The Expanse Book 1
Leviathan Wakes is The Expanse Book 1 — source for Prime's award-winning sci-fi series. We reviewed it for show-fans wanting deeper Sol-System lore.
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Prime Video's The Expanse (2015-2022) was one of the best sci-fi adaptations of the streaming era. James S.A. Corey's Leviathan Wakes (2011, book 1 of 9) is the source material. The paperback ($16, 4.2 stars) is the right entry point for show-fans wanting deeper Sol-System political lore. We reviewed it as both standalone and adaptation source.
TL;DR
The right sci-fi entry for show-fans wanting Expanse lore depth. 9-book series begins here; first 6 books mostly adapted by Prime, books 7-9 cover post-show events. Hard-science approach (real physics, plausible space politics) sets the genre tier. Pair with The Expanse Season 1 Blu-ray. Skip if hard sci-fi exhausts you (try Becky Chambers for softer alternative).
Why It Matters
The Expanse defined a sci-fi tier that respects physics. Ships travel within solar-system distances at realistic accelerations; gravity in space stations affects daily life; the political tension between Earth, Mars, and the asteroid belt feels economically grounded.
For show-fans, the books expand: more political detail, more character backstory, more internal monologue. Book 7-9 (released after Prime ended) cover events the show didn't reach. Most show-fans graduate from streaming to books.
Key Specs
- Authors: James S.A. Corey (pseudonym for Daniel Abraham + Ty Franck)
- Series: The Expanse #1 of 9
- Pages: ~582
- Original publication: 2011
- Format: Paperback (Kindle, hardcover, audio also available)
- Genre: Hard sci-fi / space opera
- Setting: Solar system, ~200 years future
- Awards: Hugo Award nominee
- Reading time: ~12-15 hours
Pros
- Hard sci-fi physics. Realistic acceleration, gravity, distances.
- Character-driven plot. Holden, Miller, etc. — full POVs.
- Plausible space politics. Earth/Mars/Belt economic tension.
- Faithful Prime adaptation comparison. What show kept/cut.
- 9-book series payoff. Book 7-9 beyond show events.
- Hugo Award nomination. Genre recognition.
- Approachable hard sci-fi. Not as dense as Greg Egan; not as soft as Star Trek.
Cons
- 582 pages. Commitment for casual readers.
- Multiple POV chapters. Some readers prefer single-POV.
- Slow first 100 pages. Setup-heavy.
- Hard sci-fi technical detail. Some readers prefer character over physics.
- Series commitment. 9 books × 600 pages each = 5400+ pages total.
- Older sci-fi feel for some. 2011 publication; pre-modern AI commentary.
Who It's For
- Prime Expanse fans. Source material with depth.
- Hard sci-fi readers. Physics-respecting genre.
- Space opera enthusiasts. Sol-system political intrigue.
- Series committers. 9-book payoff.
- Adaptation comparison readers. What Prime kept vs cut.
- Skip if you prefer soft sci-fi (Becky Chambers' Wayfarers series), if 600-page books exhaust you, or if you found the show sufficient.
How to Use
- Read after watching Prime Season 1 (or before; either works)
- Note adaptation choices: which character POVs Prime kept primary
- If hooked: continue with Caliban's War (book 2)
- Books 7-9 are post-Prime — only available in book form
- Audio version is well-produced for audiobook listeners
How It Compares
- vs The Expanse Prime Season 1 (streaming): Streaming for casual; book for depth. Own both for completeness.
- vs Children of Time (Adrian Tchaikovsky) ($17): Comparable hard sci-fi; different premise. Pair them.
- vs Project Hail Mary (Andy Weir) ($14): Comparable accessible hard sci-fi. Different scope.
- vs Ancillary Justice (Ann Leckie) ($16): Comparable space opera with awards. Different politics.
- vs The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet (Becky Chambers) ($14): Softer alternative. Pick by hard/soft preference.
Bottom Line
Leviathan Wakes is the right entry point for The Expanse book series and the deeper-lore companion for Prime show fans. Hard sci-fi physics, multi-POV character drama, 9-book series payoff. The Expanse Prime Video is the show counterpart; Children of Time and Project Hail Mary are comparable hard sci-fi picks. For "the sci-fi book that the show was based on," this earns the slot at $16.
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