Dead Astronauts

A Novel

No cover

Jeff VanderMeer: Dead Astronauts (2020, HarperCollins Publishers Limited)

336 pages

English language

Published July 15, 2020 by HarperCollins Publishers Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-00-837532-4
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4 stars (27 reviews)

5 editions

A surrealist painting

5 stars

Imagine a surrealist painting in an apocalyptic landscape with bioengineered monsters. But that description does not do it justice. I am left with poignant images that have to be pieced together and ruminated on. Or I can stop trying to piece this narrative puzzle together and just accept the beautiful fragments as they are. The message of this novel is that the dread and violence at the end of the world will be searing but also there will be wonder and love.

It's Good, But Caveats

5 stars

This book reaffirmed my suspicion that I enjoy abstract unimaginable prose to direct linear storytelling. If that's not something you're in for, we'll unfortunately you've made it this far in the Borne series.

I would say Borne is great as a standalone and doesn't need any of the other two books. Strange Bird adds a heart breaking and beautiful layer of nuance to the world and makes for a great Duology. Dead Astronauts does for me what Strange Bird did, yet I really can relate to why there are so many that this book didn't click for. I've never read something that required so much heavy lifting to really integrate and engage with, and that's with reading all three books back to back in a short period of time. The effort was well rewarded in my opinion, but I feel compelled to warn potential readers that enjoyment feels predicated on …

Review of 'Dead Astronauts' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Well, this sure is a book.

I suppose if you specialize in writing The Weird it's only a matter of time before you go FULL WEIRD and dive right into experimental fiction, constructing a swirly atmospheric nearly plotless time-shifting POV-shifting planet-shifting pre- and post- and post-post apocalyptic prose poem.

This book is technically a sequel to Borne, I suppose, but very much unlike it, and although there are many ties back to Borne (I spent a large amount of time returning to Borne and searching for characters and references while I read this book) it is not really in the same style, and if you like a conventional narrative you're going to have a lot of trouble with this book. I did not know what to expect from this book when I bought it (I didn't even know it was Borne #2, I have not been paying attention) and it …

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Subjects

  • Fiction, dystopian