Book description
The bestselling author of The Martian returns with an irresistible new near-future thriller—a heist story set on the moon.
Jasmine Bashara never signed up to be a hero. She just wanted to get rich.
Not crazy, eccentric-billionaire rich, like many of the visitors to her hometown of Artemis, humanity’s first…
Why read it?
4 authors picked Artemis as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
Artemis feels underrated compared to Weir’s other books, but has his signature style—hard sci-fi delivered as amusing and accessible first-person banter.
It speculates on what life might look like in the Moon’s first city through the perspective of a brilliant yet somewhat selfish and immature female protagonist, Jaz, which only makes her more interesting to follow. She pulls off a dangerous, scientifically plausible heist and uncovers a hidden secret.
I listened to the audiobook, and Rosario Dawson’s narration was incredible.
From A.'s list on heist novels set in space.
Books are about people, not necessarily about plots. Could anyone have done what this person did? Not necessarily, because not everyone was this one character.
I love science fiction stories which centre around the experience of one person. I want to see the world through their eyes, and I want it to be an authentic experience with faults and mistakes and messiness. Artemis brings me into her experience and this story could only happen with her at the centre, messiness and all. I learned about moon-living through Artemis' life, and without the impossible download of so much information.
Some say…
I couldn’t let this one pass by, not least because it helped solidify my name for the lunar colony in my books.
Once again, Andy Weir examines the themes of humanity as related to personal choice and responsibility in the face of a larger whole. Jazz navigates the perils thrown at her with humor, good will, and a healthy dose of self-preservation. Again, there’s a reason I think that Weir defines hopepunk for the modern author.
From Adam's list on to learn about hopepunk SF and why we need it.
If you love Artemis...
Jazz Bashara, Andy Weir’s bad-ass female MC in Artemis, is one of my favorite female sci-fi protagonists of all time. Jazz is a “moon-girl” who makes her living on the Moon’s first city by using her job as a porter to smuggle contraband onto rocket deliveries via a childhood pal on Earth. An apostate Muslim, Jazz is wicked smart, funny as hell, and has a morale code that defies logic yet, somehow, makes complete sense. Weir brings his signature sense of humor to this character without dumbing her down or sexing her up. He takes us on a great…
From Sarena's list on science fiction with kick ass female characters.
If you love Artemis...
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