‘Project Hail Mary’ Review

“Project Hail Mary” by Andy Weir is a gripping science fiction novel that tells the story of Ryland Grace, an astronaut who wakes up alone on a spaceship with no memory of who he is or how he got there. As his memory gradually returns, he realizes that he is the sole survivor of a last-ditch mission to save humanity and Earth from an extinction-level threat.

I had no emotional connection to these characters whatsoever. When all these big events were happening and I should have felt worried for them, I honestly was just like, “Yeah, that’s happening.” I can definitely tell which characters were meant to be the comic relief, which ones we were supposed to root for, and which ones we were supposed to hate, but honestly, I didn’t feel any of that. Ryland Grace, our main character, had dialogue that was over-the-top quirky. Nobody talks like that, and it made me cringe. However, he did really feel like a human being on this mission. My favorite character was Stratt. I do wish we had more resolute endings for our side characters. That’s something that I’m realizing while writing this review: this book was very open.

The atmosphere was one of my favorite parts. You cannot help but feel anxious and claustrophobic while reading this book. You can feel it for Grace being on this mission, being all alone on the spaceship in outer space where no human has been before. You can also feel it for everyone on Earth. There’s this impending disaster that civilization doesn’t know if it will be able to save itself from or not. It felt like a ticking time bomb, not knowing what was going to happen to not just our main character, but Earth as a whole.

As stated before, the dialogue was rather quirky, and I found that to be cringey. However, there were comedic moments. It feels weird to say, but I think this book was kind of wholesome. The complaint I have about the writing, though, is that the science and math talk was rather much and went over my head. However, this was a medium-paced book and easy and accessible to get through for a science fiction novel. When I saw the length being nearly 500 pages, I was so scared this book was going to be dense, but it wasn’t.

I do not know if this book was intended to be a plot-driven one, but the plot was definitely the highlight for me. Each timeline that we’re following, one being preparing for this mission, and then the mission itself, has so much intrigue. I was wanting to know if the mission would be accomplished and how Ryland Grace got involved in this mission. To make this book more confusing, I would’ve even wanted a third plotline of following what was happening on Earth while Grace was in space. There was a lot of logic, except one decision in the last 10% of the book made me angry. Also, it’s so open, and I’m so curious. I have more questions after finishing this book, which means I will be going on a Reddit deep dive tonight. I did have probably three big questions, and I was so worried that they weren’t going to get answered, but they did. If you’re worried things are going to wrap up properly, they don’t wrap up 100%, but if you keep going through the story, I promise some of your big, important questions will get answered. This was a good book, but it’s nowhere near being a new favorite book of mine. I would still recommend it.

3.75 out of 5 stars.

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