*I received an ARC of this book from Netgalley, thanks to the author - I’m sorry it took me so long to read it! We are mutuals on social media.
I initially thought Jen Comfort’s debut was going to be an sf romance about an astronaut who fell for an actual star-star (think: Clare Danes in Stardust), so I was kind of bummed when I realised it was a contemporary about an astronaut and a movie star set on boring old Earth. But. I honestly loved this book. It won me over quickly and completely, as evidenced by the way I gobbled it up during one of the busiest weeks of the academic year for me.
Reggie Hayes, our FMC, is a prickly ice-queen with control issues, and her top priority is being chosen for NASA’s Artemis mission. She *is* going to be the first woman to walk on the moon or else. Unfortunately she has a PR problem - she’s rubbish at human contact of any kind, in fact. She doesn’t do social media, she doesn’t do interviews, she doesn’t do relationships. So, in an attempt to rehabilitate her reputation after a particularly foul mouthed encounter with a space conspiracy theorist, she agrees to spend a month in the Arizona desert training an actor in preparation for a blockbuster space movie.
Enter Jon Leo, a golden retriever in man form, with the energy of a supernova and the charm of a big-eyed puppy. He’s taken with Reggie straightaway - the goth science witch of his dreams - and he’s determined to impress her. Except it’s like his personality was calibrated to unimpress her. Cue opposites attract on steroids, with added forced proximity and chemistry for daaaays. Because, man, these two are hot for each other - hormones and pheromones of teenage proportions are heating up that fake moon base in the desert.
The Astronaut and the Star is a wonderful and kind of odd (read: wonderfully odd) mix of high heat, fun banter, adorable mishaps and difficult emotions. It deals with some big issues in the form of Reggie’s horrible, loveless childhood; Jon’s struggles with undiagnosed ADHD; and the coping mechanisms they’ve both developed to manage them. But at the same time it leans into some completely bananas scenarios - one of which, at the very end, I could have done without. What I liked most is that it’s a kind, big hearted book, about two people learning to understand and care for themselves and each other. It’s a great antidote to these times we live in, and to the spate of kind-of-mean-pretending-to-be-soft contemporaries I’ve read in the last 12 months.
I’ve got to say I’m a bit stumped as to why more people haven’t been talking about it, and why so many of the reviews here are critical. Is it because Reggie is a tough FMC to warm to? Believe me, she rewards the investment in the long run. If she was the m in this mf I can’t help but feel everyone would be madly into her cold crushing emotion-denying ways. Anyway, people are missing out! For my own part I’m looking forward to Jen’s next book, which is a Phantom of the Opera retelling and sounds completely awesome.