Project Hail Mary

Project Hail Mary Analysis

Project Hail Mary is yet another treatment from Andy Weir that tells a narrative about human resourcefulness and resilience. Akin to Weir’s debut novel The Martian, the protagonist is stranded alone in space—though briefly in this instance—and has to rely only on the available resources for the completion of a mission. Though it differs in terms of the character's objectives and nature of the mission, it is also about collaboration and comradeship. In the novel, Weir incorporates some tropes such as first contact, an existential threat, and interstellar mission but also subverts others like a villainous extraterrestrial being. Even though the main adversary in this tale is the single-celled organism dubbed Astrophage that threatens the star energy, the motif is challenged in this genre-bending book. In this case, the alien, Rocky, is a competent ally who will aid the protagonist to become a better scientist, astronaut, and most of all a reliable friend.

At the heart of the novel is a story of friendship but also about a flawed man who has the opportunity to redeem himself. This narrative about redemption portrays a version of Ryland Grace—a once disgraced molecular biologist— before the launch of the Hail Mary and aboard the spaceship. Initially, he had been tasked with training half of the crew until an accident requires him to take part in the mission. Reluctant and adamant to disrupt the mission, Stratt has to direct an amnesia-inducing drugging on top of the induced coma during launching. As the only hope for humanity, the opportunity has been presented for Grace to correct his past failures in science and in restoring his life. A stint with Rocky teaches him patience, collaboration, and nobility towards completing the mission packed with mishaps at every turn.

With a career spanning many years as a software engineer, the author is renowned for his elaborate hard science and research in his works. Though it is science fiction, the novel has accurate elements of chemistry, aerodynamics, engineering, and quantum physics at the core. George R. R. Martin author of A Game of Thrones reviewed “Two worlds in peril, a competent (but flawed and human) man, a competent alien, unending scientific puzzles to unravel, with humanity itself at risk…If you like a lot of science in your science fiction, Andy Weir is the writer for you.”

Update this section!

You can help us out by revising, improving and updating this section.

Update this section

After you claim a section you’ll have 24 hours to send in a draft. An editor will review the submission and either publish your submission or provide feedback.

Cite this page