Perhaps diction has come full circle, with easily available world wide communications, and now people actually speak in comprehensible sentencesNothing hurts me quite like the insane claim that Amos is from Baltimore. If he says he's from Bal-ti-more (as opposed to Bawlmur, Mairlyn), then he's not from Baltimore, MD.
Humanity might have the Epstein Drive and Ring Gates but e-in in 2350, foke don by Dundock'll still be gidn drunk awn sh**ty Naddy Bo by duh wooder and mashin erry wurd, n madder how lawn, inna tew sillbulls.Perhaps diction has come full circle, with easily available world wide communications, and now people actually speak in comprehensible sentences![]()
Really? I wasn't too thrilled with the book version but it's making a lot more sense to me in the context of the show. He's a classic manipulator/con-man/sociopath. He has no empathy; everyone is a tool to be used; he's charming and manipulative and HAS to be seen and admired and make it look like EVERYTHING is his idea/under his control; and frankly he has massive weak spots that haven't really been revealed in the show yet. There are reasons he spent so long as a fairly minor player in the Belt, and reasons why he jumped up to the big leagues.There's some chatter about problems with Inaros in the TV show being a soap opera villain and cookie cutter terrorist.
I worry if the book version's worse. Just finished book 3 the other day.
Sure. We're also watching the rapid and potentially complete unravelling of the Martian identity. Before the ring, the Martians had a certain level of unity imposed by the need to terraform Mars. They endured, together, for the promises made to future generations on the only other rock in the solar system capable of that sort of habitation. Then the ring's gates offer a (probably) much easier path to terrestrial life now instead of generations down the line.Well, as noted, just giving over warships goes way beyond money to the Martians. There has to be more in play, at least from the Martian perspective, for them to support Inaros.
And Inaros is their most likely path to the Ring Worlds, so "me first" starts to enter play rather heavily.Sure. We're also watching the rapid and potentially complete unravelling of the Martian identity. Before the ring, the Martians had a certain level of unity imposed by the need to terraform Mars. They endured, together, for the promises made to future generations on the only other rock in the solar system capable of that sort of habitation. Then the ring's gates offer a (probably) much easier path to terrestrial life now instead of generations down the line.
That's a pretty big factor in play.
I think the show’s version of Inaros is better than the book’s. Much like with Klaes Ashford, who is a disposable one-dimensional villain in the novels.There's some chatter about problems with Inaros in the TV show being a soap opera villain and cookie cutter terrorist.
I worry if the book version's worse. Just finished book 3 the other day.