Memory's Legion is a collection of short stories and novellas that authors James S.A. Corey wrote in The Expanse universe while the completed the novels. Currently, I am finished up to book 5, Nemesis Games, and so have read the short stories up to that point. I will review each one and then come back and add new reviews as I make my way through the series.
Drive - 5/5
Drive is the earliest material set in The Expanse universe set 150 years before the series. Technically, you could read it before anything else, of course, but the significance of the namesake of the short story would be lost on you until you at least read the first book. This was a nice little story about Solomon Epstein. I enjoyed the story, although be warned that it will pull at the ol' heartstrings. I am always a big fan of flashbacks interwoven with the present at points of relevance. I feel like I'm watching a movie and given what is happening in the story, the flashbacks add a great deal of character growth that has the reader more invested page after page.
Recommended Reading Order - Best read after Leviathan Wakes (#1)
The Butcher of Anderson Station - 5/5
This tale follows Fred Johnson and gives the background to his nickname that the story is titled after. Fred is a powerful and imposing presence in Leviathan Wakes. Throughout it, it was hard to see why he was called 'The Butcher' as it didn't line up with what I was reading. This story gives tremendous insight into two major changes in his life. Much like Drive, this story has a combination of flashbacks and present day sections interwoven in the tale to hype up the tension. The ending is quite poignant and believable when it comes to how the military and its leaders often view situations with immense blinders.
Recommended Reading Order - Best read after Leviathan Wakes (#1)
Gods of Risk - 4/5
This story's format breaks away from the last two where it's all told in its present day. No flashbacks this time! Our main character here is sixteen-year-old David Draper, nephew to our dear fan favorite Bobbie Draper. David turns out to be a really annoying character to get inside his head, but perhaps most of us were when we were 16. He's brilliant, and brilliantly naïve as he sacrifices everything for a girl. Come to think of it, sounds on point for someone his age. The little cameos with Bobbie were fun and intriguing since we never see her with her hair down in the series that much. Gods of Risk did have tense moments, but they were few and far between a bunch of teenage angst and ignorance.
Recommended Reading Order - Best read after Caliban's War (#2)
The Churn - 5/5
This was the one novella I just couldn't wait until this collection came out for and that's because... Amos Burton! Origin Story! The man, the myth, the legend, and my personal favorite from The Expanse series gets a backstory in The Churn.
Throughout The Expanse’s first 3 books, you keep getting glimpses of Amos, the unfeeling brute, having very strong feelings. This is particularly true when it comes to helping those that are helpless, innocent, and young. It’s his intense fury when coming to Mei’s defense and helping Prax in Caliban’s War that is the most jarring and ultimately sealed him as a favorite. “I am that guy.”
The Churn helps fill in a little of that empty void that is Amos’s soul when it comes to helping the helpless. I enjoyed seeing how he came out of Baltimore as a youth and it makes sense why, when his past was brought up in Abaddon’s Gate, he has a sharp, violent response. At first, I thought reading this would make sense after Abaddon's Gate, but it's actually best read before you get to Nemesis Games due to some of what happens in The Churn coming up there.
Recommended Reading Order - Best read after Cibola Burn (#4)
The Vital Abyss - 3/5
The Vital Abyss is my least favorite and that might be due to it having the most annoying and despicable characters in it. Of course, once you find out who these people are, it all kind of makes sense. The story is told from one POV but, again, it's laced with flashback scenes in between the meat of the story. Those actually helped to make me feel empathy for the main character, but that quickly changes as those get further along. After I finished, I was left longing for more revelation and some sort of a payoff. That never happened.
Recommended Reading Order - Best read after Nemesis Games (#5)
Strange Dogs - 4.5/5
Strange Dogs is a unique short story set in the Laconia system some time after the events in Babylon's Ashes. This is one of those times where reading the Postscript after the story actually helped me have a greater appreciation for what the author's were trying to do. The story is told from the point of view of a young girl named Cara as she encounters magical things happening on the alien world. Cara's story plays out like a sci-fi horror if you look at it from everyone's perspective except for her own. Her perspective would have you think it's all make-believe fairy tales come to life. The juxtaposition of the two is where the story thrives. I'm curious to find if any of these characters will show up in the main series.
What really got me excited, though, was the amount of weird and creepy things going on here. I'm aching to find out more about this world and system. I have high hopes going into the 30 year time jump after Babylon's Ashes and am excited to see where the series goes. Without much from the protomolecule aside from passing mentions in the last couple books, I anticipate we'll see more of it and it's maker's technologies in the future.
Recommended Reading Order - Best read after Babylon's Ashes (#6)
Auberon - 4.5/5
The events in this short story take place in between books 7 & 8 so I would actually recommend reading this outside of the publishing order. This is a crime story of sorts that follows one of the new political governors being sent around the universe and follows up on a couple of loose threads. I was delighted to find one of the POV's (of which there are 3) follows an old favorite character we've only seen on the periphery for the most part. His handling of the events here were masterful and in character, while the revelation for the main character at the end, Governor Biryar Rittenaur, was satisfying. I was a bit worried at how dark the ending seemed to be headed towards, but I was very pleased and it helped me make peace with one of the more disturbing arcs in Persepolis Rising.
Recommended Reading Order - Best read after Persepolis Rising (#7)
The Sins of Our Fathers - 4/5
This brief novella acts as a coda and an end to this wonderful series. Truly, it all seems like one lengthy allegory on the nature of humanity and how much we will never change, even if our surroundings and the technology around us do. There are two characters that were present in the main series in this, one that I was pleasantly surprised by. Overall, the story is a bit underwhelming but the overall narrative and the moral James S.A. Corey conveyed fit in with the grand scope of the entire series. I was hoping for a story about our main characters and where they ended up after the events of Leviathan Falls, but alas, this is not fantasy, The Expanse always had it's foundation in reality and life usually never wraps up the way we want.
Recommended Reading Order - At the end, of course.