More on this book
Community
Kindle Notes & Highlights
The crew of The Infinity were chosen in a grueling decade-long application process that analyzed every aspect of their personal and genetic history. This screening process was followed by five years of intense NASA training.
Intense 😳 how about governments changing and new laws being approved? Is NASA an independent organ? Take notes to search more about it
I’ve been alone on this spaceship since my parents died. The last time I hugged someone, smelled their shampoo, or even just spoke to them face-to-face was February 25, 2062. Five years ago. Right now I’m officially farther away from any other human being than anyone else has been since the evolution of the species.
I should be proud to be the first human to land on a planet and create a new civilization. I get to carve out a new home for humanity among the stars. But some days it’s hard to remember the exciting parts. I get stuck in the memories. It’s hard to focus on the future when the past is so distracting.
Just so relatable!
Not on a I’m in space kind of scale but in a more down to earth privileged first world country inhabitant
On my very worst days, I think of nothing but how vulnerable I am out here. I’m balanced on the edge of oblivion with only a fragile skin of metal separating me from the void of space. My only choice is to carry on into nothing, until the day that The Infinity reaches a new star system and glides into orbit around a rocky planet. If the planet turns out to be hostile—if there’s scorching radiation from its two suns, or an atmosphere fierce enough to turn my lungs black—then I’ll be lost. I’d have to make the decision to keep going to the next hospitable planet, which might be many years’ extra
...more
I watch the new episode without taking my eyes off the screen for even a moment. Jayden Ness, the puppy-eyed and long-legged mixed-race selkie, and Lyra Loch, the no-nonsense feminist banshee, are trying to track down a fairy selling illegal love potions.
This shouldn’t be hard, but for some reason I feel shy. What if I say the wrong thing, and make a terrible first impression? Should I be formal and polite, or funny and relaxed? This would be so much easier if they’d sent me a message first. Then I could just copy their tone, instead of having to try and work out what to say myself.
even though light is the fastest thing in the universe, messages currently take over a year to travel through deep space between me and Earth—and the delay increases every day. At this point, it’s almost impossible to have a proper conversation with anyone on Earth.
It’s not like I’ve ever even been to Earth. I have no real investment in which ruling government is currently controlling the piece of land that one of my parents came from—or that the land the other came from has been bombed. It’s all happening on a planet I’ve never seen. But I still feel uneasy.