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Sign up todayDead Astronauts
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Learn moreBookseller recommendation
“Set in the same world as his excellent 2017 novel Borne, Dead Astronauts finds VanderMeer again at the top of his game exploring a universe destroyed by the nefarious Company. Delightful strangeness abounds: a man disintegrating into hundreds of salamanders, an ancient giant fish called Leviathan, a large blue fox with a message to deliver across time ā all these and more make Dead Astronauts one of VanderMeerās most engagingly strange and beguiling novels. As he continues to explore deeply environmental themes, his unique lens makes the reader ponder our current climate crisis in a new way. A wonderfully weird, nature-driven science fiction odyssey through time and space.”
— Caleb Masters • Bookmarks
Bookseller recommendation
“Set in the same world as his earlier works, Borne and Strange Bird, Jeff Vandermeer has continued to impress with his strange universe of conscious creatures existing in perilous post-apocalyptic circumstances. Taking place in a wild and dangerous landscape called the City which has been destroyed by the Company and overseen by a mysterious blue fox, three companions embark on an exploration of this destroyed world. Told from varied points of view, some human, some not, we as readers get to explore too. This novel can can be read independently, although those that have read Borne will enjoy the development of familiar elements.”
— Rachel • Brilliant Books Audio
A messianic blue fox who slips through warrens of time and space on a mysterious mission. A homeless woman haunted by a demon who finds the key to all things in a strange journal. A giant leviathan of a fish, centuries old, who hides a secret, remembering a past that may not be its own.
Three ragtag rebels waging an endless war for the fate of the world against an all-powerful corporation. A raving madman who wanders the desert lost in the past, haunted by his own creation: an invisible monster whose name he has forgotten and whose purpose remains hidden.
Jeff VanderMeerās Dead Astronauts presents a city with no name of its own where, in the shadow of the all-powerful Company, livesāhuman and otherwiseāconverge in terrifying and miraculous ways. At stake: the fate of the future, the fate of Earthāall the Earths.
Jeff VanderMeer is an award-winning novelist and editor. His fiction has appeared in the Library of Americaās American Fantastic Tales and in multiple anthologies. His recent books have made the yearās best books lists of Publishers Weekly, San Francisco Chronicle, and Amazon.com.
Emily Woo Zeller is an Audie and Earphones Awardāwinning narrator, voice-over artist, actor, dancer, and choreographer. AudioFile magazine named her one of the Best Voices of 2013. Her voice-over career includes work in animated film and television in Southeast Asia.
Reviews
"[VanderMeer] delivers vital ferocity in this darkly transcendent novelā¦Itās precisely that ferocity that makes āDead Astronautsā so terrifying and so compelling.ā
āThis is a Russian doll of a novel, with each chapter containing worlds upon nested worlds, all of them dreamlike and dark. In this shattered landscape, VanderMeer explores urgent ideas about capitalism, greed, and natural destruction.ā
āA work of literary science fiction in which the fate of humanity is at stake.ā
"[A] darkly transcendent novel filled with phantasmagoric visions, body horror, and tortured beings traversing a blasted desert hellscape. Think The Last Judgment but with more animalsā¦So terrifying and so compelling.ā
āThe final pages of Jeff VanderMeerās Dead Astronauts tie everything together, making sense of what came before.ā
āA relentlessly experimental novel, shifting viewpoints and styles, skipping through time frames and across cosmic distances, changing formatsā¦Despite this complex approach, however, it is utterly accessible.ā
"Dead Astronauts is a kaleidoscopic and fractured mosaicā¦. The experience of reading it is a compulsively absorbing confusionā¦Yet the book is profoundly emotional.ā
āSections of the novel are beautiful even when they are chilling; multiplying perspectives on similar events build a complexly layered narrativeā¦While the novel is fantastical in many respects, itās certainly not whimsical; itās a collection of narratives that startles.ā
āTakes [a] sense of invention and playfulness to the extreme, giving us a modern and post-modern tour-de-force unlike any mainstream science fiction novel written over the last two decades.ā
āVandermeer is a master of literary science fiction, and this may be his best book yet.ā
āVandermeerās follow-up to Borne explores the multiple pasts and futures of the City and the sinister Company that twists and destroys countless living things.ā
āNarrator Emily Woo Zeller reprises her role as the listenerās guide through the beguiling postapocalyptic āBorneā world. While part of a series, the story is accessible as a stand-alone with its own protagonistsā¦Attuned vocal characterizations of nonhuman charactersāincluding an isolated behemoth, a dark bird, and a mysterious blue foxāfacilitate entry into this mesmerizing realm.ā
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