Will Sargent rated Tiamat's Wrath: 3 stars

Tiamat's Wrath by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse 8)
Tiamat's Wrath is a science fiction novel by James S. A. Corey, the pen name of Daniel Abraham and Ty …
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Tiamat's Wrath is a science fiction novel by James S. A. Corey, the pen name of Daniel Abraham and Ty …

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"Let’s be honest here, debt is a mechanism of social control. That’s one point Singer makes over and over again, which he didn’t have to work too hard to convince me of: clades believe heavily in repaying your debts to the family, and they weaponize that ethos. Emotionally speaking. Guilt is a currency."
"You can’t build an emotionless, rational, decision-making machine, because emotionality and rationality aren’t actually separate—and all those people who spent literally millennians arguing that they were, were relying on their emotions to tell them that emotions weren’t doing them any good."
"This has nothing to do, of course, with either Connla or me having a tendency to shrug into Singer’s skin and pretend to be a space ship ourselves. Definitely not while making vroom noises."
Great if you like reading about the cafeteria. There is barely any technical detail in here and instead it’s more of a travelogue and description of engineers.
This is a book set in the future, where the ecosystem is slowly collapsing and everyone is pretty sure that humanity is fucked in the long term. In this world, Laurence and Patricia, two young nerds, are bullied in school, confide in one another, and are quietly nursing fantasies of saving the world. Oh, and in this world magic is real, sort of like Brakebills only less dysfunctional.
The problem is that seers keep having visions that show that Patrica and Laurence are the ones who fuck things up completely.
I really liked this book for being so clear about large scale systems collapse and what it's like to live in San Francisco where you can have all the technology but there's a coffee shortage, and what it's like to live in a world where magic exists but can't fix anything.

After surviving Deep One internment camps and making peace with the government that destroyed her home, Aphra Marsh attempts to …