Project Hail Mary (Weir) 3+/5. D told me when I started this book that he'd heard it was Weir returning to form, and then I knew exactly what to expect!
And indeed this was a delightful book for a science nerd, full of delighted "Here's how the science would work for this!" infodumps and Solving Problems through Science!! Yeah!! It's basically as if a Randall Munroe book (
or his blog) came to life and I am
here for that. As you might expect from that description, there isn't any characterization or meaningful relationships or anything (with one exception, mentioned later on), but eh, that's for a different book.
One nice thing about the lack of characterization is that even though the Macguffin is that humanity is faced with eventual apocalypse that will just get worse and worse over time, it didn't really ping to me as a depressing book, but rather a joyful one, because what's the point of a Solving Problems Through Science book if you don't actually solve the problems, and everyone was definitely having a lot of fun with the science along the way.
Wow, though, I had to laugh at how simplified everything that wasn't ~Science!!~ was! If humanity were faced with mortal peril in ~30 years, by all means all countries would all work together without any fuss and they'd give one totally well-meaning person world-dictator-like powers to do whatever needed to be done to save humanity, and, yeah, it would totally work great like that, sure!
( Maybe mild spoilers? )But yeah, this was definitely one of those books where if you were not warned ahead of time and if you weren't feeling like reading a book like the one this was, I can definitely see not liking it. Fortunately I was both warned and OK with reading this!
Light from Uncommon Stars (Aoki) - 3+/5. Katrina Ngyuen is a teen queer trans girl who runs away from her abusive family. She has a talent for the violin that attracts the attention of a great violin teacher, Shizuka Satomi, who's called "the Queen of Hell" for good reason, that good reason being that she has literally made a compact with hell that she will deliver them students who would trade their soul for being top-ranked violinists. Also, during the course of the book, they meet and befriend a starfaring family, the Tran family, who escape from interstellar war and buy a donut shop, from which they both make donuts and build an interstellar gate in the giant donut sign that is outside of the donut shop.
...As you can see, this is a book that goes a lot of places! And I enjoyed it! And there is a lot of good food in it, and a lot of music. I particularly liked this part:
Katrina: I have something super important to tell you, and you might not like me after I've said it.
Shizuka: OMG. You're going to tell me that you already have a violin teacher, don't you?? UGH. That's the WORST.
Katrina: What? No, I'm trans.
Shizuka: Okay. But seriously, do you already have a violin teacher?? Because that would suck, but we can work around that!
Katrina: Did you hear me?? I'm trans!
Shizuka: Well, yes, I heard you. But you were implying this was something negative...?
Because I just love that, and I know people who are like that -- even if they didn't understand exactly, it wouldn't occur to them to be negative, because what's important is the music. (And if they have to grab their student away from another teacher, haha.) Which is a lot of what the book is about, in fact.
I do think I feel like there is something about the book that feels shallow to me. I think there is so much going on that it doesn't seem to be delving into any of it very deeply, maybe. Personally, I would have loved more about the violin-competition world and the personalities and relationships and cross-currents involved, and I felt like I got just enough of it that I was like "...and that's it?? But you could have done so much more with it??"
And then there was Tamiko, who had the potential to be a really interesting character (she is in the running for Student to be Delivered to Hell, only for Shizuka to become interested in Katrina instead) and it looked like she was going to have an interesting arc but... then she didn't.
Anyway, I did like it! I think it's just that it wanted to be a poem and a fairy tale instead of a novel (it really is kind of a fairy tale in the way that Katrina and Shizuka find each other and help each other), and that wasn't what I thought I was going to read? That is, I think the majority of the difference between my reaction to Uncommon Stars and Project Hail Mary is simply that I knew
exactly what I was getting into with PHM, heh.