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4.01 AVERAGE

adventurous emotional informative inspiring medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

It’s alternate history of 1950s but the world’s gonna end due to an extinction level meteor strike. The MC is a badass physicist with anxiety who intellectually bitchslaps all the sexist dudes around her.

I don't usually go for historical fiction or women's fiction, but this one was like both of those things done right, with sci-fi and spec fic elements to seal the deal. Definitely going to pick the next one up.

This had one of the most brilliant openings of any book I read - it was bold, action-packed, and clearly showed how the main character works and thinks in a concise and show-don't-tell way.

Unfortunately, my favorite part was the first chapter and I was lukewarm on everything after that. The premise was excellent (an alternate history where a meteor collision in the 1950s leads to women being a prominent part of an accelerated Space Race). It was just a little slow. I was hoping we'd get to colonization faster, which I find much more interesting than launching rockets into space.

I lived through much of the times of women fighting for basics so felt much of what the lead character was going through. Loved the ending and now can't wait to read the next in the series.

4 stars, Metaphorosis Reviews

Summary:

A meteorite strike in the mid-20th century brings on a climate change crisis, and an opportunity for a female pilot to become an astronaut, if she can get past cultural and institutional barriers.
Review:

I’ve been aware of Mary Robinette Kowal, but not yet been drawn to any of her books. It seems now that this may have been a mistake. The Calculating Stars isn’t a perfect book, but it’s a good one. It’s the kind of hard SF that we don’t see much anymore. While I was disappointed to find that Kowal claims to “understand none of” the orbital equations in the book, she presents them credibly, and I wouldn’t have doubted her ability had she not herself admitted the lack.

It took me a while to get into the book. While it starts well, it veers quickly into a kind of progressive Right Stuff atmosphere that put me off, even allowing for the period and pseudo-military context. Eventually, though, they get past that.

The book kicks off with a familiar concept – a Hammer of God-style meteorite strike. But that’s really just to fork the timeline to an alternate reality. The rest of the book is a hopeful (or perhaps idealized) women’s perspective on the space race that’s a little more along the Stephen Baxter line (but with emotions). The narrator is perhaps a bit too much of a poly-math to be credible in the way the book seems to aim for, but is otherwise within the bounds of fiction. I had more trouble with the narrator’s character, which I found inconsistent – sometimes brave and outspoken, sometimes quiet and unassuming – even allowing again for the period, and for the character’s anxiety. The problem was compounded for me by central couple’s domestic life – a marital union so blissful and devoid of tension as to strain credulity. Even when one of the couple does get a teense grouchy, they immediately and invariably apologize, and all is well again. Even in conditions of high strain, neither ever puts a foot wrong, and neither holds a grudge. That’s a problem, because while the focus of the book is clearly on the narrator, Kowal makes her marriage an integral, central part of the story, and it can’t really hold the weight. The book’s also a little heavy on the soft-focus sex for my taste, but that’s a quibble.

Overall, this is a well, written, credible hard SF look at an alternate history of the space race, and deserving of attention. I’ll be interested in the next book in the series, and Ms. Kowal’s other work.

emotional lighthearted medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

I like the world building. I like the plot. I just don’t like the dialog or banter. The characters don’t feel real to me. Antagonists just hate our main gal because, when everyone else loves her. Space, math, and piloting jargon isn’t contextualized, so while it sounds real, there’s no explanation of what it means so it’s not intriguing to me the reader. Things seem to resolve too easily, without Elma really having to show her work.
adventurous inspiring slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

On the surface a book about overcoming sexism and becoming an astronaut, but an overwhelmingly large part of the book is about the main character experiencing severe social anxiety and having low stakes conversations with her friends and husband.

The, unfortunately small, sections dealing with piloting are thrilling, but the majority lacks narrative tension and depth.

In the end, the main antagonist is overcome by his own medical condition, and after The Spare Man I’m starting to think Kowal is fine with resolving her plots via deus ex machina.


Reading this, I felt a bit like I did when I saw Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman in the theater. There's something about seeing someone who is a bit like you kicking ass and taking names. Elma is also that kind of hero, and she handles setbacks with a grace that I could only dream of. All of her training in Southern manners paid off. I also related to her anxiety, and liked that she actually sought help even though the stigma was there.

I'm not really saying anything profound here. If you think you'd like a novel about lady astronauts overcoming obstacles and sexism, you'll like this. It was pretty much exactly what I wanted it to be.
adventurous emotional hopeful medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes