Sei astronauti viaggiano in orbita attorno alla terra, nell'ultima missione da compiere a bordo della stazione spaziale prima che venga smantellata. Vengono dall'America, dalla Russia, dall'Italia, dalla Gran Bretagna e dal Giappone, e hanno lasciato le loro vite dietro di sé per osservare la terra muoversi sotto di loro. Li vediamo nei brevi momenti di intimità in cui ricevono notizie da casa, contemplano le loro foto, preparano pasti disidratati, dormono a mezz'aria in assenza di gravità. E soprattutto, siamo con loro mentre studiano il silenzioso pianeta blu, su cui scorre intensa la vita da cui sono esclusi.
Una dichiarazione d'amore per questo meraviglioso pianete
4 stars
Questo libro è per chi trasformava bottiglie in magiche astronavi, per chi vede le pennellate di William Turner nei paesaggi trafitti di luce, per chi fluttua e volteggia nel profondo di un sogno, e per chi ha capito che esistiamo in un’effimera fioritura di vita e sapere, un’esplosione estiva, fugace come uno schiocco di dita.
Thanks so much to the publisher for providing an advanced reader copy for me to review.
Firstly, this book contains the exact recipe for a book that I would love. To Be Taught If Fortunate, by Becky Chambers, Providence by Max Barry, The Freeze Frame Revolution and Blindsight by Peter Watts... if it involves a few people on a spaceship together with no space and no choice but to become deeply invested in each other's lives, I'm very likely going to love it.
Orbital by Samantha Harvey was no exception. We follow one "day" cycle of 6 astronauts from different backgrounds orbiting the earth in the present day, 16 orbits total. However briefly in this quick ~200 page book, we get to spend an intimate amount of time with these astronauts: their thoughts, their duties, and their relationships, almost as if we are the seventh astronaut sharing the claustrophobic space …
Thanks so much to the publisher for providing an advanced reader copy for me to review.
Firstly, this book contains the exact recipe for a book that I would love. To Be Taught If Fortunate, by Becky Chambers, Providence by Max Barry, The Freeze Frame Revolution and Blindsight by Peter Watts... if it involves a few people on a spaceship together with no space and no choice but to become deeply invested in each other's lives, I'm very likely going to love it.
Orbital by Samantha Harvey was no exception. We follow one "day" cycle of 6 astronauts from different backgrounds orbiting the earth in the present day, 16 orbits total. However briefly in this quick ~200 page book, we get to spend an intimate amount of time with these astronauts: their thoughts, their duties, and their relationships, almost as if we are the seventh astronaut sharing the claustrophobic space of the research space station they call home. While there is little story that drives the narrative, I didn't think this setting called for that kind of structure. This was a deeply introspective examination of the human condition, aspirations, emotion, and loss. It did not need a strong story progression to be compelling and beautiful.
Also, the amount of research that went into this was extremely commendable. There are so many small details about life in orbit that was clearly informed by actual experts. The acknowledgements thank NASA and the ESA for their insights, so I have to commend the author for being diligent in creating a stunning and authentic story.
While some of the routine activities interrupted with descriptions of the orbital path and philosophizing might read as tedious to some, I found it to be necessary to flesh out the otherwise indescribable experience of an astronaut's relationship with their own humanity while being at the forefront of the terrifying precipice of human achievement. The structure did take some getting used to however, with frequent jumps from one character to another, then to no character at all between paragraphs, but it wasn't too disruptive. Regarding the overall story, I do think I would have appreciated a bit more relationship development between the characters. What was there was done so well, it had me really yearning for more, but otherwise this was an excellent read and I very much recommend it.