I guess back in January, my pal Paul suggested I read
The Martian (2011) by Andy Weir. I know this because I keep a list of books I've read mixed with a list of suggestions I've taken seriously, and I do write down who made the suggestion.
When the trailer hit for the soon-to-be-in-theaters Ridley Scott directed version of
The Martian, it was absolutely the sort of thing I like seeing, and I got pretty excited. I was a big fan of
Interstellar, and I even really liked
Gravity, warts and all. And as much as I like strange visitors from other worlds-type scientifiction, I also get pretty jazzed about fictional takes or speculative takes on plain old science and technology. Mix that with the space program, like the two movies I just mentioned, and you've sold a couple of tickets to the occupants of my household.
You've got a few weeks before the movie arrives, and I highly recommend checking out the book prior to the film's release. It's not that I think Matt Damon and Co. will do a bad job - I'm a big fan of Damon (have you seen the
Bourne movies?). It's that the book is really good and reads really fast. I'd started the book just over a week ago, and recommended it to Jamie. She started and finished it all today. So, there's a context clue for you (and she also cleaned out the cupboard. I think she bent time.).
I listened to the audiobook, which takes longer, of course, but it more than filled the commute and back I had to Arlington, Texas this week.
If you haven't seen the trailer - and I'm not spoiling anything - an astronaut is delivering his first log entry after an accident occurred during an emergency evacuation of a Mars mission. He'd been stuck through by part of a loose antenna in a wind storm, and then blown over a hill, his suit's life signs reading nil. Of course, he wasn't dead, but the crew was forced to leave him, and now he's stuck on Mars, with no way to contact home, the next mission coming to the planet in 4 years, and only enough supplies for 6 people for about a month.
And yet, it's the most optimistic book I've read in years. Maybe ever.