Project Hail Mary and Artemis II

Three weeks ago, I saw the movie Project Hail Mary in an IMAX theater. I started rereading the book by Andy Weir before watching the movie, and finished the book last week. During that time, I also spent many hours watching the Artemis II launch, voyage around the moon, and splashdown, with the NASA YouTube channel on my television.

It’s been a challenging month for news in general, but the news about Artemis II was awesome. Sometimes we need something big to watch, to hope, to cheer for. In a different way, and on a much smaller scale, Project Hail Mary, in both book and movie formats, has had a bit of the same effect on movie fans and science fiction readers. I was rereading the book to see what I remembered and what was changed in the movie. There have been many movie reviews and I won’t detail the differences from the book; but my experience was that both are thrilling, entertaining, moving, and inspiring. The lack of violence is also refreshing, and I wish more movies were like that. I have recently heard that Andy Weir’s second book, Artemis, set on a moon colony, is being adapted for film, as was the hugely popular The Martian. Project Hail Mary is the improbable story about Ryland Grace, a science teacher turned astronaut on an interstellar voyage to save the Earth when the Sun and all but one other star in our area start dimming.

I don’t have memories of earlier voyages to the moon, but I have watched movies and documentaries, and read memoirs and other books about the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo missions. It was wonderful to be able to track the four astronauts in real time on their journey, and I look forward to seeing many more of their photos and videos.

Brenda