![]() ![]() These are questions that are always being asked by Cal-except, of course, when this arrogant little shit inexplicably decides to trust rando people for reasons. Who is watching? What is their motive? Why are we here? What is our purpose? I also liked how relationships were explored, how everyone has a public and a private face (sometimes more than one of each), and how these interact and play with how people are performing at any given time. The science shit was super fucking cool, and I absolutely loved reading about astronaut training and scientists and dirt and antennas and water and everything else involved with exploring and surviving in long-term space missions. I enjoyed this mainly because NASA and the way the book explored human relationships and social media. And then he meets quiet, mysterious Leon. But Cal’s family isn’t like the astronauts on the reality TV show that NASA has become. ![]() Cal is a super successful social media journalist with over half a million followers-but when his pilot father is selected to train as one of the astronauts heading to Mars, he and his family are uprooted from Brooklyn to Houston and thrown into a media circus. ![]()
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