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Put that way, he's definitely earned them.

Getting the true, definitive answer to "Who Killed Laura Palmer?" was actually about the LEAST interesting part of Twin Peaks' first season.

It's not a huge spoiler to note Havelock is a point-of-view character in Cibola Burn (Book Four).

IIRC they were restored when it was time for Dresden and his black-armored mercs to bug out — and they also needed the connection to receive all the video feeds and sensor logs from Eros.

Exactly…but we didn't see Havelock. So all we have is him getting out of the hospital and, we assume, leaving Ceres — maybe with his Belter girlfriend. Now the books eventually deliver a lot more of Dmitri Havelock, but the series left us hanging.

Open questions:

And then the Ambassador (I'm sorry, but I'll always remember Kenneth Welsh as Windom Earle on "Twin Peaks") lost his job, and his dream of retiring to Mars was ripped away. Maybe enough motive for a suicide…or to hide a murder that most will just assume to be suicide.

Inspector Sematimba's fate was unresolved in the book — we simply presume he shared the fate of the rest of Eros' inhabitants. This was better.

I'm just wondering if his eye camera was recording, and if he'd established a network link off the station (maybe to the UNN Nathan Hale, which is at least in the approximate neighborhood, vectoring in to Tycho).

He thought Julie was still on Ceres, and wanted her removed and sent back to Luna before the bad things happened. I believe he didn't put the two together until Dresden showed him her transformed body on Eros.

Dresden's people were dismayed that the Anubis, whose crew (and the Scopuli captives), were already infected, didn't make it to Eros. No protomolecule, no Stage 2.

The direct involvement of the "James S.A. Corey" duo (Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck) in the series has been enormously beneficial. You can see many times that they've actually improved on plot elements from "Leviathan Wakes," answered lingering questions readers have expressed and tightened the overall story — while at

Right now it's only on Amazon. But in HD, which for a show that does a lot of storytelling in terms of tiny visual details (props, signage, set design, ships and objects in space, etc.) is very important.

1.5 million people were on Eros in the book (give or take, depending on how many ships were docked at the moment "Phase 2" was initiated).

I want to see how they handle the…situation on Ganymede when we're introduced to Bobbie.

Assuming the Nathan Hale is Earth's equivalent to the Martian Donnager class, there's no way the Roci — a fleet escort/gunship that could fit inside its hangar bay — is going to stop it.

Mao-Kwikowski Mercantile was behind the class of stealth ships like the Anubis and the half-dozen that destroyed the Donnager, so they were already deeply involved.

Because the protomolecule's burgeoning consciousness was persuadable, not suicidal.

The cold open covered the period of time when Julie was hiding in the Anubis locker — including the moment when the Anubis fired on the Canterbury (there were voices on the intercom and appropriate sound effects). Then we go back a bit and meet the Canterbury crew.

It was definitely the Anubis that destroyed the Canterbury, in both the book and series.