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The Martian: A Novel
The Martian: A Novel
The Martian: A Novel
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The Martian: A Novel

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

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#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE

A mission to Mars. A freak accident. One man’s struggle to survive. From the author of Project Hail Mary comes “a hugely entertaining novel that reads like a rocket ship afire” (Chicago Tribune).

“Brilliant . . . a celebration of human ingenuity [and] the purest example of real-science sci-fi for many years . . . utterly compelling.”—The Wall Street Journal

Six days ago, astronaut Mark Watney became one of the first people to walk on Mars.

Now, he’s sure he’ll be the first person to die there.

After a dust storm nearly kills him and forces his crew to evacuate while thinking him dead, Mark finds himself stranded and completely alone with no way to even signal Earth that he’s alive—and even if he could get word out, his supplies would be gone long before a rescue could arrive.

Chances are, though, he won’t have time to starve to death. The damaged machinery, unforgiving environment, or plain-old “human error” are much more likely to kill him first.

But Mark isn’t ready to give up yet. Drawing on his ingenuity, his engineering skills—and a relentless, dogged refusal to quit—he steadfastly confronts one seemingly insurmountable obstacle after the next. Will his resourcefulness be enough to overcome the impossible odds against him?

NAMED ONE OF PASTE’S BEST NOVELS OF THE DECADE

“A hugely entertaining novel [that] reads like a rocket ship afire . . . Weir has fashioned in Mark Watney one of the most appealing, funny, and resourceful characters in recent fiction.”Chicago Tribune

“As gripping as they come . . . You’ll be rooting for Watney the whole way, groaning at every setback and laughing at his pitchblack humor. Utterly nail-biting and memorable.”Financial Times
LanguageEnglish
PublisherRandom House Publishing Group
Release dateFeb 11, 2014
ISBN9780804139038
The Martian: A Novel

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Rating: 4.295268234500745 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Jun 30, 2025

    Science fiction about an astronaut, believed to be dead and, therefore, left behind by his crew upon an emergency evacuation from Mars. It is hard to imagine a more hostile environment upon which to base a survival story. The protagonist engages in creative problem-solving, using his engineering and botanical background, to overcome a series of life-threatening obstacles. The time-period is not specified, but appears to be in the not-too-distant future when missions to Mars have become an established part of the space program.

    The book is plot-driven, and the characters are not deeply drawn. We get to know the main character through his actions. His thoughts are filtered through his sarcastic sense of humor. I thought his mission log became more of a personal diary, an antidote to his isolation, to satisfy a basic human need for communication. The science is well-grounded, but the author may have gone a bit overboard with the tech-talk, calculations, and scientific details (even for someone who has worked in the technology industry). Overall, I found it entertaining and thought-provoking.

    Recommended to those who enjoy plausible science fiction, heavy on the science, readers of survival stories, and space aficionados.

    Favorite quotes:
    “They say no plan survives first contact with implementation. I’d have to agree.”

    “The worst moments in life are heralded by small observations.”
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Jun 19, 2025

    A great survival story where you marvel at the character’s ability to find a solution to another problem that must surely be his undoing. It gets a little detailed and technical and the hero’s humour is a little puerile but still a good story
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Feb 5, 2025

    riveting. fantastic. the best scifi i’ve read in quite a while.

    hardboiled science fiction at its best. someone described it as Apollo 13 meets Cast Away. quite right. it also reminded me of Heinlein’s Have Spacesuit, Will Travel in its attention to geeky techie detail.

    the tech was fascinating to follow but i’m a science geek and the mixture of personal log and third person narrative was just right. there was even one flashback. just one. that device, thankfully, wasn’t used too much.

    the book was funny. that surprised me. Mark Watney’s character was described perfectly as the class clown of the team. it makes sense that this type of personality could survive alone for a very long time. however, this brings me to my only really critical point: i’m not sure i find Watney’s reaction to such isolation totally believable. yes, he kept himself occupied with survival tasks but i have to wonder about the utter lack of hints and asides as to his emotional state. he was being careful of his log entries after a certain point because he became aware of Historical Posterity staring down at him from his possible escape from Mars but i just didn’t get a sense of how utterly alone he was or how he felt about that. he does mention it outright in several entries but the visceral sense of it does not come across. it may be that it’s just the guarded nature of his log entries.

    other than that, i think the adventure found in this book is superb. the pacing is well done. we don’t linger overlong on any single “scene” switching from Watney on Mars to Earth seamlessly and with just the right amount of terseness. when new challenges arise for Watney, they are believable and grow organically from his situation. none of them feel at all contrived. watching Watney work out solutions to problems was the core of this story. there is something about witnessing an expert totally engage with their environment. like an artist totally absorbed in their study of a certain subject or an athlete attempting to analyze their performance to eek out just one more dram of excellence or a chess master in a trance of potential strategic moves. it simply sucks me in.

    part of the underlayment of what makes this story work so well is that all of the technology described is feasible or extant right now. given time, people, and people willing to see the value in making this happen, it is plausible that this could be happening right now. no need to engage fantastical future tech like hyper drives, transporters, personal shields, ansibles, or even cryonic sleep. just tech that is now or could be very shortly.

    the other part of this story that speaks to me is Watney’s tenacious and voracious love of life. not that that was what sustained him totally. i think that he was able to survive precisely because he could lose himself in problem-solving. he could become completely one with whatever challenge was set before him and thus forget about his lonely predicament. to watch someone work this hard both physically and mentally was pure, slack-jawed joy for me. the book surprised me by being funny but it surprised me more by how uplifting it was. food for the soul indeed.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Jul 31, 2024

    This book was the movie on steroids! this is a good thing, a great thing. it means that the movie stayed incredibly true to the book :) they key difference is how it all ends.

    I adored Weir's writing style, and the nerd in me rejoiced at Watney's antics even more than I did with the film. Of course, having seen the film first, I kept picturing Matt Damon. Mental Fan-casting ruined. Alas, it was totally wicked :) Suffice it to say that I get why they picked Matt Damon, the character felt written for him.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Jul 18, 2024

    This book was so much fun to read, just like Project Hail Mary. Such an enjoyable narrator that was funny and intelligent. I learned so much reading this book! Definitely worth reading even if you've seen the movie.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Mar 2, 2025

    Good story about a man trying to survive a bad situation. Lots of real science incorporated
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Jul 5, 2024

    Loved it!!!
    Mark Watney rocks.
    One of the best science fiction ever.
    Yeah, I know the plot gets predictable after halfway through, but still it is one of the best books that I have read. At one point, I actually started wishing for the rescue mission to succeed.
    If you ever liked science fiction, this one is a must read. It's got drama, suspense, thrill, science, the whole package. It's even got a little love story in it :)
    This is the first book that I read from the Goodread's choice award list, and I definitely plan to read more.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Jun 18, 2024

    Absolutely hilarious. Surprisingly accurate science.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Dec 3, 2024

    A fantastic novel. The premise is simple and there aren't a ton of characters, but the characters are excellent and the writing is great. There are laugh out loud parts of this book.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5

    Oct 11, 2024

    There were a couple of things missing from this one. I just don't enjoy endless technical details. Endless. And in this case it was at the expense of characterization. I get that Mark was a whiz at figuring out what he had to do to survive. I didn't need to hear it in deadly detail. What I didn't hear was anything about his interior environment. Yeah yeah he had a certain personality and that was a huge part of the reason he survived but not one paragraph of angst? Of his heart? The only person I know that would truly enjoy this would be a 13 year old science fan. Me, not so much.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Mar 26, 2024

    Fantastic, my sort of book, couldn't put it down. Maybe because I'm an engineer and I like physics and fixing or making things but Andy Weir could not have done better.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Feb 23, 2024

    Elisa has been after me to read this for ages, and I knew I was going to like it, and I finally did read it and it was just as great as I thought it would be.

    Two points of compare and contrast with Star Wars Episode VII, which I also saw last weekend:

    While I noticed and appreciated the diversity of the other Hermes crew and NASA staff, I did wonder a few times what it would have changed to write Mark as not a man or not white or not straight. He's a blank slate for every nerd's fantasies about being a plucky funny clever quietly-badass MacGuyver who can jerry-rig anything in an hour flat. And like all nerds who are at least one of not male/white/straight, I'm very practiced at ignoring that and relating anyway, even though I now know that consuming this kind of media too heavily will rot my self-esteem as surely as too much Halloween candy will rot my teeth.

    I guess, to echo literally everyone else, in the year of our lord two thousand and fifteen why am I still amazed that a big budget sci fi movie has a black man and a white woman as action leads (not to mention a flying Bechdel pass)?

    I also hope that The Martian hasn't ruined me forever, re: standing up in movie theaters and screaming you can't run a spaceship into a bunch of trees/rocks/enemy fire and then just up and fly that thing back into space if you don't want to end up dead of decompression/explosion/suffocation/starvation/all of the above at once in an entertaining series of events.

    Ok, I lied, one other thought about The Martian: something tells me that that the boot output screen of Pathfinder as published in the book is highly accurate, and when I imagine the author tracking people down to ask about the fine details of Pathfinder's boot process, I become very, very happy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Mar 20, 2024

    The Martian by Andy Weir is a fabulous space ride with its story. Although the whole affair was a bit too technical for me, as I am not from a science background, But hats off to the author for the amount of detail written in the book. I have already watched the movie, but still, listening to the book was a new kind of experience.

    Mark Watney was the only character on which I was focused. With every page, the thrill increases and our hope rises. I was amazed with all those minute details that bound the story together to the end. It was a little bit difficult for me to understand all those hardware and software details. Still, the book successfully entertains us to the climax. Definitely, the book deserves 5 stars.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Mar 19, 2024

    I haven't been this caught up in a book in a long time. This Science is accurate, the plot believable and the characters authentic. I couldn't put the book down.

    Highly recommended if you are a fan of hard Sci-Fi.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Mar 5, 2024

    It was surprisingly poorly written. I think it suffered from too much hype, rather than terrible writing. The story was relatively interesting, but it’s just a castaway plot-line.

    The main character Mark Watney is rather unpleasant, although not obviously meant to be. No-one is a standout interesting character, the disasters are a bit too rote and on time. “I’ve been reading 5 minutes, time for another thing to go wrong.” And the writing was really just not very good.

    It could have done with a good editor and a couple of revisions in my opinion. I also did not enjoy the weird POV shifts and changes in narrative, why do a weird shift when Watney suddenly actually reaches the MDV? Why not just have him… log it? Like he logged most everything else.

    It wasn’t even like NASA could have seen it, as they would have just been receiving photos. That kind of shift happened a couple of times and was very disruptive.

    All in all, kinda meh.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Jan 23, 2024

    I am breaking my self-imposed rule against giving 5 stars to a book I haven't read at least twice. [UPDATE: I have now.] This is the best science-y science fiction book I have read in ages! There is so much science and engineering information in this book. Every predicament and every solution are plausible and well explained. (The only thing that remotely strained credibility was how many predicaments there are. But how else does one get a novel-length book?) How does Mark Watley wind up stranded alone on Mars, with no way to contact Earth? Good question, with a good answer. What will he eat? What will he drink? What will he breathe? Good questions, with good answers. Will he get home to Earth? How? Questions that remain right up to the very end.

    But that's not all that makes this book so enjoyable. Even without another human to interact with, Watney is a wonderfully funny and engaging character. I will miss spending time with him.

    If I have one complaint, it would be that I wish Andy Weir had kept the language a little cleaner, so that teachers could unreservedly recommend this to middle school-aged kids. They could get so much from this book. (Yes, I know the kids wouldn't be too shocked or put off by the occasional F-bomb, but teachers have to be careful about their recommendations.)

    If you are a science fiction fan, do yourself a favor and read this book immediately. And then join me in waiting breathlessly for Weir's next book.

    [UPDATE: Audiobook note: The reader, R.C. Bray, does a magnificent job narrating the book. (Apart from consistently mispronouncing the word "SYSOP".) If anything, the climax of the book is more intense when listened to than when read directly.]
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Nov 16, 2024

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Feb 13, 2024

    The Martian was an absolute delight to read. It is easily one of my favorite books of all time. Andy Weir does an incredible job of blending scientific jargon with masterful storytelling.

    After a dangerous storm threatens astronauts on the surface of Mars, the decide to abandon their mission and return to Earth. The problem: one of them didn't make it back onto the ship before it left. Mark Watney has been stranded on a planet far from Earth with no way to get back. As he survives the best he can, Earth desperately tries to find a way to bring him back alive.

    This book thrilled me until the very end. I couldn't put it down.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Dec 19, 2023

    Well, THAT was a good time.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Aug 1, 2024

    A book full of surprises, science, emotion, and uncertainty.

    The story begins with the Ares 3 mission, where a sandstorm prevents an astronaut from returning to the Hermes spaceship. Mark (our protagonist) has the bad luck of having an antenna pierce his side, leading his companions to believe he is dead.

    When he wakes up, he finds himself completely alone. Despite this, he has a great sense of humor, and with his skills and ingenuity, he manages to devise a plan to survive (even though Mars tries to kill him many times; seriously, the poor guy goes through so much).

    This book does contain a degree of science, but it is entertaining, it moves quickly, and at the same time, you learn many basic survival skills in case you get lost on Mars someday… (Translated from Spanish)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Nov 25, 2023

    Does anyone else remember Einstein Anderson? He was the protagonist of a kid's book around when I was growing up, who used to deliver comeuppances to bullies through the appliance of science. Well, when he grows up he becomes Mark Watkin and gets stranded on Mars. And develops a cornball sense of humor.

    Of course on Mars he is not combating bullies. No, he is in a battle royale with the planet of Mars, not to mention Lady Luck, in his battle to stay alive long enough to be rescued. But apart from some essential supplies, he only has his ingenuity and knowledge to rely on.

    Overall this is a rollicking good, gripping read. But it's very much a geeky boys own adventure story. Considering that this guy is stranded on Mars, looking at years on his own, there is precious little introspection, existential angst, or even just lamenting the things he misses. Which is fine, but makes it all slightly one-dimensional. Honestly, though, that doesn't detract from the book's charms and enjoyment — and what it's trying to be, it succeeds at very well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Oct 24, 2023

    Great concept, weak characters and dialogue. Really wonderful for getting into a spacefaring mindset, though.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Oct 11, 2023

    Huh. I guess I'm just not into math-y stories. Although everyone else seems to be. I might be the person in my book club who appreciated this book the least.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    May 29, 2024

    Mark Watney lives an odyssey. While he is with his teammates on the planet Mars conducting research, they are caught by a storm. He suffers an accident and his teammates, thinking he is dead, leave.

    Mark is left alone and abandoned on the red planet.

    And he was not dead, nor was he partying, because this is no laughing matter; it's quite serious. When he regains consciousness, he barely makes it to the compartment where he can take off his space suit and breathe.

    The injury is not serious. He weighs his options. No one knows he is alive, he cannot communicate, and an expedition will not return to the planet for several years. Food, water, and oxygen will not last that long, but Mark does not give up. He is prepared and possesses knowledge and exceptional intelligence.

    And since he documents everything in his logbook, he bombards us with each and every explanation and technical experiment he comes up with and performs to survive.
    This is undoubtedly the worst part of the book. It requires a degree in physics or chemistry (as I am in the humanities, and proudly so).
    For my part, a good number of pages of these explanations could have been spared.

    The book turns into a manual of survival and can be very interesting for those who love these topics. I found it curious and little more.

    If you want an entertaining summary, you can watch the movie, which will save you pages and pages of so many explanations (which I find incomprehensible) and is quite faithful (even the ending, which is quite outrageous). (Translated from Spanish)
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Sep 1, 2023

    This book will not want to make you go to Mars, but it may change how to see NASA. This book was extremely gripping for how technical the book was overall. The majority of the book consists of log entries from an astronaut who is marooned on a planet. I enjoyed that the character of Mark Watney was very jovial throughout his struggle to make it through an uninhabitable, desolate, and constantly trying to kill him planet.

    Similar to adventure stories I read as a child, but felt extremely well researched. Last half of the book proves impossible to put down.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Mar 27, 2024

    Excellent sci-fi. Well-written to be digestible, brilliantly thought out and features a witty protagonist. The story keeps you on the edge of your seat while feeling entirely natural, and gives a good understanding of the basic science underlying everything without burying the reader in the nitty-gritty technical details. Excellent book, and one of the ones that will stick on my shelf.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Aug 13, 2023

    This was great! I loved every single bit of it and am a bit crushed to be finished it. I sense a massive book hangover in my future.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Aug 3, 2023

    Soooooo... I watched this movie last weekend, and picked up this book because the book is ALWAYS better than the movie. Like, always. And I knew going in that this was going to be the very definition of science porn, so it's got that going for it. And I love disasters in space.

    But I was expecting this to have more depth than the movie, and I feel slightly let down. No, no, don't unfriend me, don't decide you hate me forever just because I don't like one of your favorite books. But if anything, Mark Watney is less likeable for me in the book than he is in the movie, because they went out of their way to make him likable and give him depth and personality that just aren't really there for me in the book.

    So. I'm giving up because I'm bored, and I apologize forever for that. I'm a good third of the way in, and it's just not doing it for me. I'm procrastinating on going back, and if I've procrastinated for this long, I'm just not going to manage it. :/
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5

    Jul 31, 2023

    I got 7% through this book and started to suspect that I'd pretty much got the gist. The first person narrator describes the actions they took in trying to survive on their own in a habitation on Mars. I skipped forward a bit to see if there was any character development or even any character, but it appeared that the first person narrator continued to describe the actions they took in trying to survive on their own in a habitation on Mars. The one star Goodreads reviews suggested that the whole book consists of a first person narrator describing the actions they took in trying to survive on their own in a habitation on Mars.

    I think 7% is plenty for this book. It's a really boring guy stuck in space. I hope he got out of there, just as long as he doesn't try to tell me about it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Jul 24, 2023

    It was ok. Reads more like a checklist with some twists than a novel. All characters stick to their roles, there's no development for anyone. The action is engaging as long as you skim through any paragraph containing numbers. Weird changes in perspective are jarring. Still, a pretty decent light read for vacation.

Book preview

The Martian - Andy Weir

CHAPTER 1

LOG ENTRY: SOL 6

I’m pretty much fucked.

That’s my considered opinion.

Fucked.

Six days into what should be the greatest month of my life, and it’s turned into a nightmare.

I don’t even know who’ll read this. I guess someone will find it eventually. Maybe a hundred years from now.

For the record…I didn’t die on Sol 6. Certainly the rest of the crew thought I did, and I can’t blame them. Maybe there’ll be a day of national mourning for me, and my Wikipedia page will say, Mark Watney is the only human being to have died on Mars.

And it’ll be right, probably. ’Cause I’ll surely die here. Just not on Sol 6 when everyone thinks I did.

Let’s see…where do I begin?

The Ares Program. Mankind reaching out to Mars to send people to another planet for the very first time and expand the horizons of humanity blah, blah, blah. The Ares 1 crew did their thing and came back heroes. They got the parades and fame and love of the world.

Ares 2 did the same thing, in a different location on Mars. They got a firm handshake and a hot cup of coffee when they got home.

Ares 3. Well, that was my mission. Okay, not mine per se. Commander Lewis was in charge. I was just one of her crew. Actually, I was the very lowest ranked member of the crew. I would only be in command of the mission if I were the only remaining person.

What do you know? I’m in command.

I wonder if this log will be recovered before the rest of the crew die of old age. I presume they got back to Earth all right. Guys, if you’re reading this: It wasn’t your fault. You did what you had to do. In your position I would have done the same thing. I don’t blame you, and I’m glad you survived.


I guess I should explain how Mars missions work, for any layman who may be reading this. We got to Earth orbit the normal way, through an ordinary ship to Hermes. All the Ares missions use Hermes to get to and from Mars. It’s really big and cost a lot so NASA built only one.

Once we got to Hermes, four additional unmanned missions brought us fuel and supplies while we prepared for our trip. Once everything was a go, we set out for Mars. But not very fast. Gone are the days of heavy chemical fuel burns and trans-Mars injection orbits.

Hermes is powered by ion engines. They throw argon out the back of the ship really fast to get a tiny amount of acceleration. The thing is, it doesn’t take much reactant mass, so a little argon (and a nuclear reactor to power things) lets us accelerate constantly the whole way there. You’d be amazed at how fast you can get going with a tiny acceleration over a long time.

I could regale you with tales of how we had great fun on the trip, but I won’t. I don’t feel like reliving it right now. Suffice it to say we got to Mars 124 days later without strangling each other.

From there, we took the MDV (Mars descent vehicle) to the surface. The MDV is basically a big can with some light thrusters and parachutes attached. Its sole purpose is to get six humans from Mars orbit to the surface without killing any of them.

And now we come to the real trick of Mars exploration: having all of our shit there in advance.

A total of fourteen unmanned missions deposited everything we would need for surface operations. They tried their best to land all the supply vessels in the same general area, and did a reasonably good job. Supplies aren’t nearly so fragile as humans and can hit the ground really hard. But they tend to bounce around a lot.

Naturally, they didn’t send us to Mars until they’d confirmed that all the supplies had made it to the surface and their containers weren’t breached. Start to finish, including supply missions, a Mars mission takes about three years. In fact, there were Ares 3 supplies en route to Mars while the Ares 2 crew were on their way home.

The most important piece of the advance supplies, of course, was the MAV. The Mars ascent vehicle. That was how we would get back to Hermes after surface operations were complete. The MAV was soft-landed (as opposed to the balloon bounce-fest the other supplies had). Of course, it was in constant communication with Houston, and if there had been any problems with it, we would have passed by Mars and gone home without ever landing.

The MAV is pretty cool. Turns out, through a neat set of chemical reactions with the Martian atmosphere, for every kilogram of hydrogen you bring to Mars, you can make thirteen kilograms of fuel. It’s a slow process, though. It takes twenty-four months to fill the tank. That’s why they sent it long before we got here.

You can imagine how disappointed I was when I discovered the MAV was gone.


It was a ridiculous sequence of events that led to me almost dying, and an even more ridiculous sequence that led to me surviving.

The mission is designed to handle sandstorm gusts up to 150 kph. So Houston got understandably nervous when we got whacked with 175 kph winds. We all got in our flight space suits and huddled in the middle of the Hab, just in case it lost pressure. But the Hab wasn’t the problem.

The MAV is a spaceship. It has a lot of delicate parts. It can put up with storms to a certain extent, but it can’t just get sandblasted forever. After an hour and a half of sustained wind, NASA gave the order to abort. Nobody wanted to stop a monthlong mission after only six days, but if the MAV took any more punishment, we’d all have gotten stranded down there.

We had to go out in the storm to get from the Hab to the MAV. That was going to be risky, but what choice did we have?

Everyone made it but me.

Our main communications dish, which relayed signals from the Hab to Hermes, acted like a parachute, getting torn from its foundation and carried with the torrent. Along the way, it crashed through the reception antenna array. Then one of those long thin antennae slammed into me end-first. It tore through my suit like a bullet through butter, and I felt the worst pain of my life as it ripped open my side. I vaguely remember having the wind knocked out of me (pulled out of me, really) and my ears popping painfully as the pressure of my suit escaped.

The last thing I remember was seeing Johanssen hopelessly reaching out toward me.


I awoke to the oxygen alarm in my suit. A steady, obnoxious beeping that eventually roused me from a deep and profound desire to just fucking die.

The storm had abated; I was facedown, almost totally buried in sand. As I groggily came to, I wondered why I wasn’t more dead.

The antenna had enough force to punch through the suit and my side, but it had been stopped by my pelvis. So there was only one hole in the suit (and a hole in me, of course).

I had been knocked back quite a ways and rolled down a steep hill. Somehow I landed facedown, which forced the antenna to a strongly oblique angle that put a lot of torque on the hole in the suit. It made a weak seal.

Then, the copious blood from my wound trickled down toward the hole. As the blood reached the site of the breach, the water in it quickly evaporated from the airflow and low pressure, leaving a gunky residue behind. More blood came in behind it and was also reduced to gunk. Eventually, it sealed the gaps around the hole and reduced the leak to something the suit could counteract.

The suit did its job admirably. Sensing the drop in pressure, it constantly flooded itself with air from my nitrogen tank to equalize. Once the leak became manageable, it only had to trickle new air in slowly to relieve the air lost.

After a while, the CO2 (carbon dioxide) absorbers in the suit were expended. That’s really the limiting factor to life support. Not the amount of oxygen you bring with you, but the amount of CO2 you can remove. In the Hab, I have the oxygenator, a large piece of equipment that breaks apart CO2 to give the oxygen back. But the space suits have to be portable, so they use a simple chemical absorption process with expendable filters. I’d been asleep long enough that my filters were useless.

The suit saw this problem and moved into an emergency mode the engineers call bloodletting. Having no way to separate out the CO2, the suit deliberately vented air to the Martian atmosphere, then backfilled with nitrogen. Between the breach and the bloodletting, it quickly ran out of nitrogen. All it had left was my oxygen tank.

So it did the only thing it could to keep me alive. It started backfilling with pure oxygen. I now risked dying from oxygen toxicity, as the excessively high amount of oxygen threatened to burn up my nervous system, lungs, and eyes. An ironic death for someone with a leaky space suit: too much oxygen.

Every step of the way would have had beeping alarms, alerts, and warnings. But it was the high-oxygen warning that woke me.

The sheer volume of training for a space mission is astounding. I’d spent a week back on Earth practicing emergency space suit drills. I knew what to do.

Carefully reaching to the side of my helmet, I got the breach kit. It’s nothing more than a funnel with a valve at the small end and an unbelievably sticky resin on the wide end. The idea is you have the valve open and stick the wide end over a hole. The air can escape through the valve, so it doesn’t interfere with the resin making a good seal. Then you close the valve, and you’ve sealed the breach.

The tricky part was getting the antenna out of the way. I pulled it out as fast as I could, wincing as the sudden pressure drop dizzied me and made the wound in my side scream in agony.

I got the breach kit over the hole and sealed it. It held. The suit backfilled the missing air with yet more oxygen. Checking my arm readouts, I saw the suit was now at 85 percent oxygen. For reference, Earth’s atmosphere is about 21 percent. I’d be okay, so long as I didn’t spend too much time like that.

I stumbled up the hill back toward the Hab. As I crested the rise, I saw something that made me very happy and something that made me very sad: The Hab was intact (yay!) and the MAV was gone (boo!).

Right that moment I knew I was screwed. But I didn’t want to just die out on the surface. I limped back to the Hab and fumbled my way into an airlock. As soon as it equalized, I threw off my helmet.

Once inside the Hab, I doffed the suit and got my first good look at the injury. It would need stitches. Fortunately, all of us had been trained in basic medical procedures, and the Hab had excellent medical supplies. A quick shot of local anesthetic, irrigate the wound, nine stitches, and I was done. I’d be taking antibiotics for a couple of weeks, but other than that I’d be fine.

I knew it was hopeless, but I tried firing up the communications array. No signal, of course. The primary satellite dish had broken off, remember? And it took the reception antennae with it. The Hab had secondary and tertiary communications systems, but they were both just for talking to the MAV, which would use its much more powerful systems to relay to Hermes. Thing is, that only works if the MAV is still around.

I had no way to talk to Hermes. In time, I could locate the dish out on the surface, but it would take weeks for me to rig up any repairs, and that would be too late. In an abort, Hermes would leave orbit within twenty-four hours. The orbital dynamics made the trip safer and shorter the earlier you left, so why wait?

Checking out my suit, I saw the antenna had plowed through my bio-monitor computer. When on an EVA, all the crew’s suits are networked so we can see each other’s status. The rest of the crew would have seen the pressure in my suit drop to nearly zero, followed immediately by my bio-signs going flat. Add to that watching me tumble down a hill with a spear through me in the middle of a sandstorm…yeah. They thought I was dead. How could they not?

They may have even had a brief discussion about recovering my body, but regulations are clear. In the event a crewman dies on Mars, he stays on Mars. Leaving his body behind reduces weight for the MAV on the trip back. That means more disposable fuel and a larger margin of error for the return thrust. No point in giving that up for sentimentality.


So that’s the situation. I’m stranded on Mars. I have no way to communicate with Hermes or Earth. Everyone thinks I’m dead. I’m in a Hab designed to last thirty-one days.

If the oxygenator breaks down, I’ll suffocate. If the water reclaimer breaks down, I’ll die of thirst. If the Hab breaches, I’ll just kind of explode. If none of those things happen, I’ll eventually run out of food and starve to death.

So yeah. I’m fucked.

CHAPTER 2

LOG ENTRY: SOL 7

Okay, I’ve had a good night’s sleep, and things don’t seem as hopeless as they did yesterday.

Today I took stock of supplies and did a quick EVA to check up on the external equipment. Here’s my situation:

The surface mission was supposed to be thirty-one days. For redundancy, the supply probes had enough food to last the whole crew fifty-six days. That way if one or two probes had problems, we’d still have enough food to complete the mission.

We were six days in when all hell broke loose, so that leaves enough food to feed six people for fifty days. I’m just one guy, so it’ll last me three hundred days. And that’s if I don’t ration it. So I’ve got a fair bit of time.

I’m pretty flush on EVA suits, too. Each crew member had two space suits: a flight spacesuit to wear during descent and ascent, and the much bulkier and more robust EVA suit to wear when doing surface operations. My flight spacesuit has a hole in it, and of course the crew was wearing the other five when they returned to Hermes. But all six EVA suits are still here and in perfect condition.

The Hab stood up to the storm without any problems. Outside, things aren’t so rosy. I can’t find the satellite dish. It probably got blown kilometers away.

The MAV is gone, of course. My crewmates took it up to Hermes. Though the bottom half (the landing stage) is still here. No reason to take that back up when weight is the enemy. It includes the landing gear, the fuel plant, and anything else NASA figured it wouldn’t need for the trip back up to orbit.

The MDV is on its side and there’s a breach in the hull. Looks like the storm ripped the cowling off the reserve chute (which we didn’t have to use on landing). Once the chute was exposed, it dragged the MDV all over the place, smashing it against every rock in the area. Not that the MDV would be much use to me. Its thrusters can’t even lift its own weight. But it might have been valuable for parts. Might still be.

Both rovers are half-buried in sand, but they’re in good shape otherwise. Their pressure seals are intact. Makes sense. Operating procedure when a storm hits is to stop motion and wait for the storm to pass. They’re made to stand up to punishment. I’ll be able to dig them out with a day or so of work.

I’ve lost communication with the weather stations, placed a kilometer away from the Hab in four directions. They might be in perfect working order for all I know. The Hab’s communications are so weak right now it probably can’t even reach a kilometer.

The solar cell array was covered in sand, rendering it useless (hint: solar cells need sunlight to make electricity). But once I swept the cells off, they returned to full efficiency. Whatever I end up doing, I’ll have plenty of power for it. Two hundred square meters of solar cells, with hydrogen fuel cells to store plenty of reserve. All I need to do is sweep them off every few days.

Things indoors are great, thanks to the Hab’s sturdy design.

I ran a full diagnostic on the oxygenator. Twice. It’s perfect. If anything goes wrong with it, there’s a short-term spare I can use. But it’s solely for emergency use while repairing the main one. The spare doesn’t actually pull CO2 apart and recapture the oxygen. It just absorbs the CO2 the same way the space suits do. It’s intended to last five days before it saturates the filters, which means thirty days for me (just one person breathing, instead of six). So there’s some insurance there.

The water reclaimer is working fine, too. The bad news is there’s no backup. If it stops working, I’ll be drinking reserve water while I rig up a primitive distillery to boil piss. Also, I’ll lose half a liter of water per day to breathing until the humidity in the Hab reaches its maximum and water starts condensing on every surface. Then I’ll be licking the walls. Yay. Anyway, for now, no problems with the water reclaimer.

So yeah. Food, water, shelter all taken care of. I’m going to start rationing food right now. Meals are pretty minimal already, but I think I can eat a three-fourths portion per meal and still be all right. That should turn my three hundred days of food into four hundred. Foraging around the medical area, I found the main bottle of vitamins. There’s enough multivitamins there to last years. So I won’t have any nutritional problems (though I’ll still starve to death when I’m out of food, no matter how many vitamins I take).

The medical area has morphine for emergencies. And there’s enough there for a lethal dose. I’m not going to slowly starve to death, I’ll tell you that. If I get to that point, I’ll take an easier way out.

Everyone on the mission had two specialties. I’m a botanist and mechanical engineer; basically, the mission’s fix-it man who played with plants. The mechanical engineering might save my life if something breaks.

I’ve been thinking about how to survive this. It’s not completely hopeless. There’ll be humans back on Mars in about four years when Ares 4 arrives (assuming they didn’t cancel the program in the wake of my death).

Ares 4 will be landing at the Schiaparelli crater, which is about 3200 kilometers away from my location here in Acidalia Planitia. No way for me to get there on my own. But if I could communicate, I might be able to get a rescue. Not sure how they’d manage that with the resources on hand, but NASA has a lot of smart people.

So that’s my mission now. Find a way to communicate with Earth. If I can’t manage that, find a way to communicate with Hermes when it returns in four years with the Ares 4 crew.

Of course, I don’t have any plan for surviving four years on one year of food. But one thing at a time here. For now, I’m well fed and have a purpose: Fix the damn radio.

LOG ENTRY: SOL 10

Well, I’ve done three EVAs and haven’t found any hint of the communications dish.

I dug out one of the rovers and had a good drive around, but after days of wandering, I think it’s time to give up. The storm probably blew the dish far away and then erased any drag-marks or scuffs that might have led to a trail. Probably buried it, too.

I spent most of today out at what’s left of the communications array. It’s really a sorry sight. I may as well yell toward Earth for all the good that damned thing will do me.

I could throw together a rudimentary dish out of metal I find around the base, but this isn’t some walkie-talkie I’m working with here. Communicating from Mars to Earth is a pretty big deal, and requires extremely specialized equipment. I won’t be able to whip something up with tinfoil and gum.

I need to ration my EVAs as well as food. The CO2 filters are not cleanable. Once they’re saturated, they’re done. The mission accounted for a four-hour EVA per crew member per day. Fortunately, CO2 filters are light and small, so NASA had the luxury of sending more than we needed. All told, I have about 1500 hours’ worth of CO2 filters. After that, any EVAs I do will have to be managed with bloodletting the air.

Fifteen hundred hours may sound like a lot, but I’m faced with spending at least four years here if I’m going to have any hope of rescue, with a minimum of several hours per week dedicated to sweeping off the solar array. Anyway. No needless EVAs.


In other news, I’m starting to come up with an idea for food. My botany background may come in useful after all.

Why bring a botanist to Mars? After all, it’s famous for not having anything growing there. Well, the idea was to figure out how well things grow in Martian gravity, and see what, if anything, we can do with Martian soil. The short answer is: quite a lot…almost. Martian soil has the basic building blocks needed for plant growth, but there’s a lot of stuff going on in Earth soil that Mars soil doesn’t have, even when it’s placed in an Earth atmosphere and given plenty of water. Bacterial activity, certain nutrients provided by animal life, etc. None of that is happening on Mars. One of my tasks for the mission was to see how plants grow here, in various combinations of Earth and Mars soil and atmosphere.

That’s why I have a small amount of Earth soil and a bunch of plant seeds with me.

I can’t get too excited, however. It’s about the amount of soil you’d put in a window box, and the only seeds I have are a few species of grass and ferns. They’re the most rugged and easily grown plants on Earth, so NASA picked them as the test subjects.

So I have two problems: not enough dirt, and nothing edible to plant in it.

But I’m a botanist, damn it. I should be able to find a way to make this happen. If I don’t, I’ll be a really hungry botanist in about a year.

LOG ENTRY: SOL 11

I wonder how the Cubs are doing.

LOG ENTRY: SOL 14

I got my undergrad degree at the University of Chicago. Half the people who studied botany were hippies who thought they could return to some natural world system. Somehow feeding seven billion people through pure gathering. They spent most of their time working out better ways to grow pot. I didn’t like them. I’ve always been in it for the science, not for any New World Order bullshit.

When they made compost heaps and tried to conserve every little ounce of living matter, I laughed at them. Look at the silly hippies! Look at their pathetic attempts to simulate a complex global ecosystem in their backyard.

Of course, now I’m doing exactly that. I’m saving every scrap of biomatter I can find. Every time I finish a meal, the leftovers go to the compost bucket. As for other biological material…

The Hab has sophisticated toilets. Shit is usually vaccum-dried, then accumulated in sealed bags to be discarded on the surface.

Not anymore!

In fact, I even did an EVA to recover the previous bags of shit from before the crew left. Being completely desiccated, this particular shit didn’t have bacteria in it anymore, but it still had complex proteins and would serve as useful manure. Adding it to water and active bacteria would quickly get it inundated, replacing any population killed by the Toilet of Doom.

I found a big container and put a bit of water in it, then added the dried shit. Since then, I’ve added my own shit to it as well. The worse it smells, the better things are going. That’s the bacteria at work!

Once I get some Martian soil in here, I can mix in the shit and spread it out. Then I can sprinkle the Earth soil on top. You might not think that would be an important step, but it is. There are dozens of species of bacteria living in Earth soil, and they’re critical to plant growth. They’ll spread out and breed like…well, like a bacterial infection.

People have been using human waste as fertilizer for centuries. It’s even got a pleasant name: night soil. Normally, it’s not an ideal way to grow crops, because it spreads disease: Human waste has pathogens in it that, you guessed it, infect humans. But it’s not a problem for me. The only pathogens in this waste are the ones I already have.

Within a week, the Martian soil will be ready for plants to germinate in. But I won’t plant yet. I’ll bring in more lifeless soil from outside and spread some of the live soil over it. It’ll infect the new soil and I’ll have double what I started with. After another week, I’ll double it again. And so on. Of course, all the while, I’ll be adding all new manure to the effort.

My asshole is doing as much to keep me alive as my brain.

This isn’t a new concept I just came up with. People have speculated on how to make crop soil out of Martian dirt for decades. I’ll just be putting it to the test for the first time.

I searched through the food supplies and found all sorts of things that I can plant. Peas, for instance. Plenty of beans, too. I also found several potatoes. If any of them can still germinate after their ordeal, that’ll be great. With a nearly infinite supply of vitamins, all I need are calories of any kind to survive.

The total floor space of the Hab is about 92 square meters. I plan to dedicate all of it to this endeavor. I don’t mind walking on dirt. It’ll be a lot of work, but I’m going to need to cover the entire floor to a depth of 10 centimeters. That means I’ll have to transport 9.2 cubic meters of Martian soil into the Hab. I can get maybe one-tenth of a cubic meter in through the airlock at a time, and it’ll be backbreaking work to collect it. But in the end, if everything goes to plan, I’ll have 92 square meters of crop-able soil.

Hell yeah I’m a botanist! Fear my botany powers!

LOG ENTRY: SOL 15

Ugh! This is backbreaking work!

I spent twelve hours today on EVAs to bring dirt into the Hab. I only managed to cover a small corner of the base, maybe five square meters. At this rate it’ll take me weeks to get all the soil in. But hey, time is one thing I’ve got.

The first few EVAs were pretty inefficient; me filling small containers and bringing them in through the airlock. Then I got wise and just put one big container in the airlock itself and filled that with small containers till it was full. That sped things up a lot because the airlock takes about ten minutes to get through.

I ache all over. And the shovels I have are made for taking samples, not heavy digging. My back is killing me. I foraged in the medical supplies and found some Vicodin. I took it about ten minutes ago. Should be kicking in soon.

Anyway, it’s nice to see progress. Time to start getting the bacteria to work on these minerals. After lunch. No three-fourths ration today. I’ve earned a full meal.

LOG ENTRY: SOL 16

One complication I hadn’t thought of: water.

Turns out being on the surface of Mars for a few million years eliminates all the water in the soil. My master’s degree in botany makes me pretty sure plants need wet dirt to grow in. Not to mention the bacteria that has to live in the dirt first.

Fortunately, I have water. But not as much as I want. To be viable, soil needs 40 liters of water per cubic meter. My overall plan calls for 9.2 cubic meters of soil. So I’ll eventually need 368 liters of water to feed it.

The Hab has an excellent water reclaimer. Best technology available on Earth. So NASA figured, Why send a lot of water up there? Just send enough for an emergency. Humans need three liters of water per day to be comfortable. They gave us 50 liters each, making 300 liters total in the Hab.

I’m willing to dedicate all but an emergency 50 liters to the cause. That means I can feed 62.5 square meters at a depth of 10 centimeters. About two-thirds of the Hab’s floor. It’ll have to do. That’s the long-term plan. For today, my goal was five square meters.

I wadded up blankets and uniforms from my departed crewmates to serve as one edge of a planter box with the curved walls of the Hab being the rest of the perimeter. It was as close to five square meters as I could manage. I filled it with sand to a depth of 10 centimeters. Then I sacrificed 20 liters of precious water to the dirt gods.

Then things got disgusting. I dumped my big container o’ shit onto the soil and nearly puked from the smell. I mixed this soil and shit together with a shovel, and spread it out evenly again. Then I sprinkled the Earth soil on top. Get to work, bacteria. I’m counting on you. That smell’s going to stick around for a while, too. It’s not like I can open a window. Still, you get used to it.

In other news, today is Thanksgiving. My family will be gathering in Chicago for the usual feast at my parents’ house. My guess is it won’t be much fun, what with me having died ten days ago. Hell, they probably just got done with my funeral.

I wonder if they’ll ever find out what really happened. I’ve been so busy staying alive I never thought of what this must be like for my parents. Right now, they’re suffering the worst pain anyone can endure. I’d give anything just to let them know I’m still alive.

I’ll just have to survive to make up for it.

LOG ENTRY: SOL 22

Wow. Things really came along.

I got all the sand in and ready to go. Two-thirds of the base is now dirt. And today I executed my first dirt-doubling. It’s been a week, and the former Martian soil is rich and lovely. Two more doublings and I’ll have covered the whole field.

All that work was great for my morale. It gave me something to do. But after things settled down a bit, and I had dinner while listening to Johanssen’s Beatles music collection, I got depressed again.

Doing the math, this won’t keep me from starving.

My best bet for making calories is potatoes. They grow prolifically and have a reasonable caloric content (770 calories per kilogram). I’m pretty sure the ones I have will germinate. Problem is I can’t grow enough of them. In 62 square meters, I could grow maybe 150 kilograms of potatoes in 400 days (the time I have before running out of food). That’s a grand total of 115,500 calories, a sustainable average of 288 calories per day. With my height and weight, if I’m willing to starve a little, I need 1500 calories per day.

Not even close.

So I can’t just live off the land forever. But I can extend my life. The potatoes will last me 76 days.

Potatoes grow continually,

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