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Orbital: A Novel (Booker Prize Winner) Paperback – October 29, 2024
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WINNER OF THE BOOKER PRIZE 2024 • A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
**New York Times Book Review Book Club Pick**
**Stephen Colbert’s The Late Show Book Club Pick**
Winner of the 2024 Hawthornden Prize
Shortlisted for the 2024 Orwell Prize for Political Fiction
Shortlisted for the 2024 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction
Shortlisted for the 2024 Climate Fiction Prize
One of Barack Obama's Favorite Books of 2024
A singular new novel from Betty Trask Prize-winner Samantha Harvey, Orbital is an eloquent meditation on space and life on our planet through the eyes of six astronauts circling the earth in 24 hours
"Ravishingly beautiful." — Joshua Ferris, New York Times
A slender novel of epic power and the winner of the Booker Prize 2024, Orbital deftly snapshots one day in the lives of six women and men traveling through space. Selected for one of the last space station missions of its kind before the program is dismantled, these astronauts and cosmonauts—from America, Russia, Italy, Britain, and Japan—have left their lives behind to travel at a speed of over seventeen thousand miles an hour as the earth reels below. We glimpse moments of their earthly lives through brief communications with family, their photos and talismans; we watch them whip up dehydrated meals, float in gravity-free sleep, and exercise in regimented routines to prevent atrophying muscles; we witness them form bonds that will stand between them and utter solitude. Most of all, we are with them as they behold and record their silent blue planet. Their experiences of sixteen sunrises and sunsets and the bright, blinking constellations of the galaxy are at once breathtakingly awesome and surprisingly intimate.
Profound and contemplative, Orbital is a moving elegy to our environment and planet.
- Print length224 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherGrove Press
- Publication dateOctober 29, 2024
- Dimensions5 x 0.53 x 7.25 inches
- ISBN-100802163629
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From the Publisher
Editorial Reviews
Review
Praise for Orbital
Winner of the Booker Prize 2024
Winner of the Hawthornden Prize
Shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction and the Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction
A New York Times and Booklist Editors' Choice
One of Barack Obama's Favorite Books of the Year
Stephen Colbert’s The Late Show Book Club Pick
A Best Book of the Year from Oprah Daily, Financial Times, Globe and Mail, Chicago Tribune,and The Guardian
A Most Anticipated Book of 2023 from Literary Hub
A Most Anticipated Book of Fall from the Guardian and Los Angeles Times
“Ravishingly beautiful." — Joshua Ferris, New York Times
“Samantha Harvey, one of the most consistently surprising contemporary British novelists, becomes something like the cosmic artificer of our era with her slim, enormous novel Orbital (Grove), which imaginatively constructs the day-to-day lives of six astronauts aboard the International Space Station. Orbital is the strangest and most magical of projects, not least because it’s barely what most people would call a novel but performs the kind of task that only a novel could dare . . . [Harvey writes] like a kind of Melville of the skies.” — James Wood, The New Yorker
“Do we look at space with an optimistic gaze? With dollar signs in our eyes? With imperial designs? With despair? I won’t reveal too much about the tone of Orbital other than to say it tingles with poignancy.” —Molly Young, New York Times Book Review
“Samantha Harvey’s compact yet beautifully expansive novel invites us to observe Earth’s splendour from the drifting perspective of six astronauts aboard the International Space Station as they navigate bereavement, loneliness and mission fatigue. Moving from the claustrophobia of their cabins to the infinitude of space, from their wide-ranging memories to their careful attention to their tasks, from searching metaphysical inquiry to the spectacle of the natural world, Orbital offers us a love letter to our planet as well as a deeply moving acknowledgement of the individual and collective value of every human life.” — The Booker Prize Judges
“Harvey’s lean and meditative fifth novel takes place on a space station circling Earth over a single day, as the mission’s crew of six astronauts from around the world makes a community in the absence of family or gravity. Their rare vantage point affords new perspectives on the planet below, including the lives they left behind." — New York Times
“Samantha Harvey’s meditative novel portraying life aboard a spacecraft contains on almost every page sentences so gorgeous that you want to put down the book in awe. . . . A thrilling book, filled with marvel at the beauty of creation made palpable in bravura descriptions . . . The sense of wonder and delight conveyed by Harvey’s elegant prose and philosophical musings makes this a deeply pleasurable book for serious fiction lovers.” — Wendy Smith, Boston Globe
“Set on the International Space Station over 24 hours, this short and lyrical novel charts the lives of the six people in the cramped spacecraft as they observe the world beneath them, in all its beauty and vulnerability.” — Edmund de Waal, The Week
“Harvey has created a wondrous and timely hymn to life on Earth . . . [She] vividly renders the practical and emotional details of life in space, from the cargo cubes that contain trash to the talismans and images each astronaut has brought on board. . . . Perhaps the most important aspect of the book is its interpretation of the experience of seeing Earth from outer space. . . . If Harvey meant Orbital as a tiny, 200-page chance to consider it all from a different perspective, her clarion call could not have come at a better time."— Marion Winik, Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Harvey manages, in taking readers along to the final frontier, to remind us less of our essential loneliness and more of our mutual dependence . . . With a few tiny strokes of foreshadowing and a few lovely paragraphs of description, Harvey manages to bring readers back down to Earth, astounded that they’ve traveled so far in such a short period of time, having finished their own orbit through the realms of her rich imagination." — Bethanne Patrick, Los Angeles Times
“Harvey makes an ecstatic voyage with an imagined crew on the International Space Station, and looks back to Earth with a lover’s eye . . . An Anthropocene book resistant to doom.” — Alexandra Harris, The Guardian
“Beautiful . . . [A] gorgeous meditation.” —Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
“Coming from five different countries, the space travelers represent a microcosm of humanity. This is a beautifully written, deeply thoughtful meditation on planet Earth and our place in it.”—Library Journal, Starred Review
“Luminous and profound, Orbital is hard to put down and even harder to forget.” —Booklist, Starred Review
“Harvey takes readers on board a cramped space station with six members of an international mission as they rotate the earth 16 times in 24 hours. Through their eyes, we watch typhoons grow in the Pacific, packs of noodles float in zero gravity, and continents whir by. A meditative novel that reveals our changing planet with a new urgency, and its inhabitants with a new and profound love.” —Oprah Daily, A Best Book of the Year
“A short novel of cosmic proportions.”—Financial Times, A Best Book of the Year
“Samantha Harvey is a beautiful stylist; in Orbital a group of astronauts look down on our fragile Earth. It’s a slim, profound study of intimate human fears set against epic vistas of swirling weather patterns and rolling continents.” —Guardian (UK)
“A meditation, zealously lyrical, about the profundity and precarity of our imperiled planet. Elegiac and elliptical, this slim novel is a sobering read.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Radiant . . . With Orbital, Harvey gives readers a powerful novel that, in less than 200 pages, manages to explore questions of philosophy and religion, faith, existence, meaning-making, art, grief, and gratitude, just to name a few. In showing one day in the lives of just six individuals, she probes deep into the human experience as it teeters between the profound and the mundane--even, or perhaps especially, as experienced from the rarified vantage point of space. Her luscious and lyrical language is as close to poetry as it is to prose . . . Orbital is a gift of language, a meditation on meaning, and a beautiful exploration of perspective.”—Kerry McHugh in Shelf Awareness
“Orbital is not only a timely meditation but an essential one. [Harvey’s] best novel to date.” —Irish Times
“Orbital, Harvey’s fifth novel, is The Waves in space . . . Over the sixteen orbits tracked by the novel, dazzling descriptions of the planet rhythmically recur . . . Characters’ thoughts mix and flow with the colours and light.” —Times Literary Supplement
“Reading Orbital is a dizzying experience; [Harvey] evokes the texture of daily life in the space station and pans out to sweeping, lyrical descriptions of the natural world, underpinning both with profound questions about our place in the cosmos. It is an extraordinary achievement, containing multitudes.” —Stephanie Merritt, Guardian
“A brief but deeply reflective fictional meditation.” — The Center for Fiction
"Extraordinary . . . With its radiant prose and lyrical storytelling, Orbital achieves something rarely found in books, film, or other media. This novel makes you look at the world, and our place in it, in a new way.” — Highbrow Magazine
“Slender, gleaming . . . luminous prose has become something of a trademark for Harvey.” —The Spectator
“Powerful . . . The strength of this book lies in Harvey’s stunning and rhythmic descriptions of this constantly unraveling world . . . She moves unnervingly between the intimate and the epic, while subtly unpicking the essential threads that bind them . . . The beauty of the prose engages the reader fully and, overall, this is an uplifting book. Like the astronauts, the reader is left with no firm foothold. We nevertheless come to understand the words “Mother Earth” in new and positive ways. And Harvey reassures us that, although the world may seem fragile, “no negligible thing could shine so bright”—The Sunday Times (UK)
“Slim, soulful, and haunting . . . [Harvey’s] descriptive powers are second to none.” — Telegraph (UK)
“Gorgeous . . . An intensely charged reading experience, sustained by the sensory thrill of Harvey’s imaginative attention to detail.” — Daily Mail (UK)
“A clarion call for our planet through existential awe . . . In contrast to the bleak apocalyptic tone of much contemporary climate fiction, Orbital’s luminous descriptions remind us of the beauty at stake when humanity plays fast and loose with our single, and singular, blue marble.”—Financial Times (UK)
"It takes real virtuosity to write across shifting scales and perspectives, as Harvey does in this novel. One moment, the Earth is Mother Earth, giver of life; in the next, it is just a tiny blue dot. In the same way, Harvey sends the reader lurching from the mundane to the life-altering . . . Orbital gives me hope. I feel that, today, we need this kind of encompassing vision—one that understands the smallest detail and the biggest picture, that can move effortlessly between analysis and empathy, that acknowledges the individual and the planet at the same time, and that recognizes humans as part of nature and our survival as inseparable from the health of the Earth."—Yo-Yo Ma, "Yo-Yo Ma Recommends Three Books," New Yorker
“Orbital is as beautiful as it is profound. It’s not a long book, but I made the final chapters last for weeks because I didn’t want the book to end.” —Emily St. John Mandel, author of Sea of Tranquility
“A remarkable, gorgeous novel.” —Anthony Doerr, author of Cloud Cuckoo Land
“A radiant explosion of a novel."—Jamie Quatro, author of Fire Sermon
“One of the most beautiful novels I have read in a very long time.” —Mark Haddon, author of The Porpoise
“This is such a beautiful book you have to adjust your readerly heart to take it all in. The plot is simply and extraordinarily our planet, watched by a handful of souls. Orbital wonders what it's like to be a human 'with a godly view' and because Samantha Harvey is such a spectacular prose stylist the wondering takes the form of breathtaking colour storms and brilliant encircling epiphanies of time and scale, technology and love, ambition and faith. It is an awe-inspiring and humbling love letter to Earth and those who reckon with the gift of it." —Max Porter, author of Shy
“A gorgeous song of praise from on high, a hymn sung in starlight to celebrate mankind's courage and endeavour. And without preaching or speeching it also serves as a lyric reminder of all we might lose if we do not mend our ways.” —Mike McCormack, author of Solar Bones
“The rarest of things, a book that satisfies both my lifelong obsession with space travel and my hunger for sentences and paragraphs that demand to be read and reread . . . My goodness this novel is beautiful.” —Mark Haddon, author of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
“I admire Orbital even more than the rest of Harvey's work... I don't think I've read anything else with such love for its characters and such clarity about the state of the planet, and I was deeply grateful for the novel's refusal of despair or cynicism.” —Sarah Moss, author of Summerwater
“Orbital is a magnificent, thunderous work and yet so brief, so fleeting. It is an elegy to planet Earth in all its splendour and fragility. Exquisitely well-written, it confirms Samantha Harvey as a singular talent.” —Nathan Filer, author of The Shock of the Fall
“Six astronauts on a space station are working, sleeping, and watching the world go by. They think about typhoons, algal blooms, seascapes, cities at night, Velázquez, frog calls, fried eggs, family. Orbital is a lush description of the gorgeous earth, and a broad-minded, level-headed, affectionate take on what goes on down here.” —Daisy Hildyard, author of Emergency
Praise for The Western Wind
“Beautifully rendered, deeply affecting, thoroughly thoughtful and surprisingly prescient.”—New York Times Book Review
“Harvey is an intelligent and audacious writer, able and willing to take creative risks and perform stylistic feats. . . This is a beautifully written and expertly structured medieval mystery packed with intrigue, drama and shock revelations…We navigate the corners of Harvey's characters, all the while marveling at the intricacy of her puzzle and the seductiveness of her prose.”—Minneapolis Star-Tribune
“Harvey has summoned this remote world with writing of the highest quality, conjuring its pungencies and peculiarities… In this superb novel, time, like guilt, is a murky medium, at once advancing and circling back, and pulling humankind helplessly between its battling currents.”―Wall Street Journal
“The Western Wind brings medieval England back to life… By the time we find out how Tom Newman died, we’re less interested in a mystery solved and more intrigued by the fate of a long-gone place, a place that Harvey brings to life from its historical tomb.”―Washington Post
Praise for The Shapeless Unease
“To read Harvey is to grow spoiled on gorgeous phrases; she’s an author you want to encounter with pencil in hand."—New Yorker
“Both cools and warms, lofts and lulls, settling gradually on its inhabitant with an ethereal solidity.”—New York Times Book Review
“So exquisitely written it’s a challenge to review, as there is an impulse to quote nearly every precise, stylized line. Her chronicle of morality, mortality and memory is adept at capturing the ineffable reservations with—and appreciation for—being alive.”—Newsday
“The Shapeless Unease is a masterpiece, so good I can hardly breathe. I’m completely floored by it.”—Helen Macdonald
“The Shapeless Unease captures the essence of fractious emotions—anxiety, fear, grief, rage—in prose so elegant, so luminous, it practically shines from the page. Harvey is a hugely talented writer, and this is a book to relish.”—Sarah Waters
“This book felt enormous to me, mercurial, devastating, seeming to grapple with the nature of everything in a manner so compelling it is impossible not to be swept along. A book to return to again and again.”—Daisy Johnson
About the Author
Samantha Harvey is the author of five novels, Orbital, The Western Wind, Dear Thief, All Is Song, and The Wilderness, and one work of nonfiction, The Shapeless Unease. Orbital was the winner of the Booker Prize 2024, and her other work has been shortlisted for the Women's Prize, the Guardian First Book Award, the James Tait Black Prize, and the Walter Scott Prize. The Wilderness was awarded the Betty Trask Prize. She lives in Bath, UK, and teaches creative writing at Bath Spa University.
Product details
- Publisher : Grove Press
- Publication date : October 29, 2024
- Language : English
- Print length : 224 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0802163629
- Item Weight : 7.7 ounces
- Dimensions : 5 x 0.53 x 7.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,830 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #25 in Exploration Science Fiction
- #245 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- #1,562 in Genre Literature & Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Samantha Harvey is the author of the novels Orbital, The Wilderness, All is Song, Dear Thief and The Western Wind and a work of non-fiction, The Shapeless Unease: A Year of Not Sleeping. Orbital was the winner of the Booker Prize 2024, and her other work has been shortlisted for the James Tait Black Award, the Women's Prize, the Guardian First Book Award and the Walter Scott Prize. The Wilderness was awarded the Betty Trask Prize. She is a tutor on the MA course in Creative Writing at Bath Spa University.
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseORBITAL
RATED GREAT. 5/5
A multinational team of astronauts and cosmonauts circle the earth at 17,000 miles per hour on the last mission before the space station is decommissioned in favor of a more ambitious moonshot. And nothing much happens. Except for the Sense of Wonder!
"From the space station’s distance mankind is a creature that comes out only at night. Mankind is the light of cities and the illuminated filament of roads. By day, it’s gone. It hides in plain sight."
What plot exists in concerned with dealing emotionally with a family funeral that an astronaut cannot attend, a mission to the moon that these astronauts kinda follow, a supertyphoon that bears down on the Philippines, the scientific experiments that each crew member mundanely performs, and staring down at the earth and contemplating.
But this isn’t a book about plot.
"It is hard to believe the quality of blackness that is the entirety of space around a day-lit earth, where the earth absorbs all the light – yet hard to believe in anything but that blackness, which is alive, and breathing and beckoning."
This is a beautifully written prose poem about the big and the small everywhere. Planet Earth is both immensely large and yet small and fragile in the context of space. Human beings are immensely important and yet cosmically meaningless. Some have called this an elegy for the Earth, and I’m not sure I agree with that. It is a contemplation of the sort men do at campires, into sunsets, above crashing waves, and into the eyes of newborn children or down at caskets.
"That’s all this great human endeavour of space exploration really is, he thinks, an animal migration,"
So much of this novella ( ~40,000 words) is dedicated to the beauty of Planet Earth, spilling out in long sentences that run for pages, separated only by commas, covering widely diverse thoughts, or impressions, or quips, or questions, and yet hold a cadence that is masterful, propulsive, and worthy of listening to in an audiobook performance. I will definitely do that for a reread. I devoured this book in less than 24 hours.
"At the beach hut they’d been human, a woman, a man, a wife and mother and daughter and a husband and father and son, and they’d crossed themselves, tapped their nails and bitten their lips in unconscious angst. But when they’d got to the launch pad they were Hollywood and sci-fi, Space Odyssey and Disney, imagineered, branded and ready. The rocket peaked in a cap of gleaming newness, absolute and spectacular whiteness and newness, and the sky was a glorious and conquerable blue."
Is this scifi? I don’t know. Probably not by my definition. The only extrapolative element is a few science experiments on mice and a new mission to the moon. Still, nothing has so completely put me inside a space station as completely as this novel. It has more in common with the great travel narratives — such as those written by Paul Theroux, Peter Mayle, and Pico Iyer — that most science fiction.
And yet, the “Sense of Wonder” in this book is amazing. Rockets, Planet Earth, Space Stations, Astronauts?If that isn’t great science fiction, then I’ve never read any of it.
"when I watched the Challenger launch as a child, that was it for me. It wasn’t the moon landings, it was Challenger. I realised space is real, space flight is real, a thing real people do, die doing. Real people, like me, could actually do it, and if I died doing it that would be OK, I could die that way."
It a condemnation of the current genre that a book like this can win the 2024 Booker Award, but not even be in the Hugo Award discussion. Still, it finds its audience. A New York Times Bestseller and many thousand reviews on Amazon, Goodreads, and the like.
We think we’re the wind, but we’re just the leaf
Orbital has my strongest recommendation possible. I love this!
- Reviewed in the United States on December 6, 2024Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase'Orbital' by Samantha Harvey, with its 207 pages, is a thought-provoking journey that does not pretend to be something it is not. It takes us into the minds of astronauts and cosmonauts as they float around the Earth, sharing their profound thoughts about what they see. This deep and existential narrative values introspection over dramatic events, a style that may not appeal to everyone but certainly left me with a lot to ponder.
While we often ponder the moon landing and the search for life on Earth, 'Orbital' by Samantha Harvey takes a different approach. It prompts us to consider the implications of encountering other beings and what that means for our place in the universe. The book Sailors of the Stars focuses on Earth and its appearance from the outside, a perspective few will experience, reinforcing our secure place in this world.
As a 9-year-old, when the Challenger exploded, I didn't dwell much on its impact on the space travel industry. But Samantha Harvey, the author of 'Orbital, 'delves deep into this existential question. What did it mean? Her contemplation extends to the very purpose of space travel, often meandering in thought to the point of losing the reader.
Still, there is some beautiful imagery here. If you have difficulty imagining what Earth would look like from the International Space Station, Harvey paints a picture. The astronauts are learning as they go, which means we are, too. They stand in awe of how they see the Earth and recognize different countries and borders. Some have more extended tours of duty than others.
I have more friends doing reading challenges than I previously imagined, so a short but deep work like this will serve its lofty purpose. You will love its universal message and understand its profound significance to humanity.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThe writing is strong. The sentences are meaty and vivid. In the beginning, I was in. The first half had me. It lost me a bit in the back half and I felt there was a lot more potential to this piece. But it's a love letter to existence as it is now. If you need to pull back from the stress of the world, Orbital is a good place to get the Star's Eye View.
Top reviews from other countries
J. LamedeReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 3, 20255.0 out of 5 stars What a winner!
Halfway through this extraordinary novel I had my doubts. After all, you could say that it’s all about going round and round in circles. But in the end Samantha Harvey very much more than justifies her Booker.
There are writing gurus who swear that the fundamental secret, bar none, to all good writing is the sentence: get that key component right and you’re on a winning streak from the off. If that were all there was to it, even then Harvey would certainly be a winner. Her sentences are beautifully structured and sparkle and shimmer with wit, insight and feeling. She’s a born writer, but her novel goes way beyond the mere accomplished sentence. The centre of her book is the visionary experience of the Earth seen from space. Oh, the stars and the moon come into it too, but what concerns her are the six astronauts (well, four astronauts and two cosmonauts, Russians) in the space station two hundred and fifty miles above the planet.
Orbital is a close, intimate recreation of twenty four hours in the lives of these two women and four men, confined in their cramped metal container as it spins through sixteen orbits, working its way over continents, islands, seas and deserts, while they experience sixteen sunsets and sixteen sunrises (a helpful map at the start shows you their detailed trajectory). They carry out their set routines of cleaning and maintaining the craft, performing the vital physical exercises to keep themselves trim in a weightless environment, and carrying out various scientific experiments. Chie, for example, the Japanese crew member, rejoices when the lab mice she’s supervising finally learn to float, instead of desperately trying to rely on non-existent gravity. Meanwhile, she grieves for her mother, back in Japan, who has just died. She recalls her favourite moments with her, but will miss the funeral.
Other events outside impinge. They witness the build up of a super-typhoon in the Pacific, but beyond reporting back to mission control, are of course powerless to do anything about it. They enthusiastically follow the launch of a new Moon-landing expedition, not a little envious of their fellow astronauts. They fret about home and families, treasure the few mementoes mounted around each of their individual cramped sleeping quarters.
But the centre of everything is what they see through the windows: ‘They don’t know how it can be that their view is so endlessly repetitive and yet each time, every single time, newly born.’ They experience ‘A sense of gratitude so overwhelming that there’d be nothing they could do with or about it, no word or thought that could be its equal…’
In the end, Harvey’s sense of the extraordinary adventure of orbiting in space, witnessing the marvel of the globe beneath you, widens out into an enthralling vision of mankind’s future explorations and the planetary wonders beyond Earth.
Happy with the purchase!Reviewed in Belgium on October 22, 20244.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Read
Quick delivery; as expected. Would have liked if the packaging was a bit better because the day it was delivered, it was raining and the edges of the book were a little soggy. Not too much but they were.
Quick delivery; as expected. Would have liked if the packaging was a bit better because the day it was delivered, it was raining and the edges of the book were a little soggy. Not too much but they were.4.0 out of 5 stars
Happy with the purchase!Beautiful Read
Reviewed in Belgium on October 22, 2024
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nashinokiReviewed in the Netherlands on January 3, 20253.0 out of 5 stars Niet wat ik verwachtte
Het gaat over 3 astronauten en 2 cosmonauten in ISS die in een baan om de aarde gaat. Het is een meditatieve roman over leven, tijd en de menselijke ervaring waarbij de baanbeweging om de aarde als metafoor wordt gebruikt. Alle astronauten hebben een soort van muizenissen. Het gaat vooral over Chie, die haar moeder verliest terwijl ze in het ISS is. En over een mega Orkaan over de Fillipijnen.
Het is doorspekt met Global Warming retoriek. Ook gaat het over de maanlanding van een groep andere astronauten, dat is nog niet gebeurd. Dus het verhaal speelt in de toekomst. Eigenlijk gaat het nergens over terwijl het overal over gaat, deelt alleen ervaringen en herinneringen van de ruimtevaarders. Het is een tour de force en het voelt soms kunstmatig hoe de schrijver bepaalde dingen mooi of filosofische wil overbrengen.
De ervaring van het in een baan om de aarde vliegen vind ik wel heel goed beschreven. De ervaring van het in de ruimte zijn. Ook heb ik nieuwe dingen geleerd over het in de ruimte zijn; zoals dat de astronauten eigen niet echt gewichtsloos zijn omdat ze nog steeds in het magnetisch veld van de aarde bevinden, maar zweven door de valbeweging omdat ze zo snel gaan. 16 zonsopgangen.
Het irriteerde me dat het boek eigenlijk nergens naar toe werkte en het verhaal ineens eindigt. Ondanks deze frustratie, was de thematiek intrigerend.
GianReviewed in Japan on November 4, 20255.0 out of 5 stars Lovely
Brilliant
Shalini PReviewed in India on March 19, 20265.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful and profound
One of the best novels I read this year.

































