If you didn바카라t read Samantha Harvey바카라s Booker-winning novel Orbital in 2024, do so in 2025. Harvey바카라s book revolves around six astronauts who are brought together on a spacecraft that does a ninety-minute transit around the earth and thereby, 16 such orbits daily. A narration of their scientific experiments could have simply been science-fiction or a study of the interaction between the six characters in a closed space바카라and it does do that. However, the book is far more than that. It unfolds the full splendour of Mother Earth as seen from far beyond the Karman line. The concept of day and night is witnessed all at once vividly across the full girth of the planet with Papua New Guinea divided: 바카라The island바카라s day-lit half lies lush and dragon-like, its mountains mythical in the long last night, its coasts outlined by bioluminescent shores. Its dark half is a shadow on royal blue water.바카라 The wonder that is the earth unfolds, which Harvey describes as 바카라바카라theatrics, the opera, the earth바카라s atmosphere, airglow, and sometimes it바카라s the smallest things, the lights of fishing boats off the coast of Malaysia dotted starlike in the black ocean.바카라 The beauty of the earth without a trace of human footprints, except for the nighttime lights, when seen from the spacecraft is that of a planet unsullied, with no signs of environmental degradation and destruction. It is as haloed as all the other planets, as alluring and mysterious.
Yet, amidst all this, each of the six astronauts go through their own moments of introspection and reflection on things that in the more mundane earthly existence may not have generated similar depth. But these thoughts exist because the six men and women have a contextual pull towards the landmass; there are relationships, images, memories, emotions that bind them to earth even from a space that has no gravitational pull. These characters are very different from each other and yet in this small, confined space they are the world unto each other. Think of Anton바카라s innocence, when he remembers how his father made him believe that he would be the next Russian to step on the moon and pick the Korovka candy left next to the Russian flag. And the moment when they pass Bolivia바카라s bright orange Laguna Colorada and the wind-cut folds of the Kavir desert that finally brings the resolve to be able to say, 바카라Zabudem, ladno바카라, let바카라s forget it, to a loveless marriage. Or the perplexed thoughts of Nell and Shaun, where the latter cannot understand how Nell can be an astronaut and not believe in God and Nell wondering how Shaun could be an astronaut and believe in God. 바카라바카라..a tree made by the hand of nature, and a tree made by the hand of the artist. It바카라s barely any difference at all, and the profoundest difference in the world.바카라


Chie, the Japanese woman, has lost her mother while she is on the spacecraft. She is mystified by the karmic connection that a picture of her mother taken by her father could have been prophesising the future! Was it that just as her mother had escaped by a sliver when Nagasaki got bombed, she wanted Chie to understand her providence that the picture, taken on the day man landed on the moon, was leading Chie to outer space?
Orbital is a work of a higher order; philosophical at a very fine level while also observing the mundane aspects of human life. It is a narrative about the existential crisis of humankind caused by the over-exploitation of the earth. It raises deeper questions about what it means to be alive, to be human. In the context of space and time, who are we and do we even matter? It바카라s a humbling work because it reminds you how insignificant you are, whichever dimension you measure against. You think you can read it fast, after all, it바카라s only 136 pages long, but every page makes you stop, ponder, translate the elements to existential space and pushes you to think beyond the obvious.
Through the six astronauts who are the protagonists, Harvey is able to question so many dimensions of human life. The capsule is like a ring fence far removed from the earth; it바카라s floating in what we think of as the universe from our viewpoints. The book shares an aerial view of the earth, which looks beautiful and alluring, until you remember Chie바카라s understanding of what human greed has made of the planet.
This comment on politics stands out: 바카라 If politics were just a farcical, inane, at times insane entertainment provided by characters who for the most part have got where they are, not by being in any way revolutionary or percipient or wise in their views, but by being louder, bigger, more ostentatious, more unscrupulously wanting of the play of power than those around them, if that were the beginning of the end of the story.바카라 But sadly, it바카라s a force that has shaped every single thing on the surface of the earth that they had thought was 바카라human-proof바카라. Harvey displays incisive understanding when she links the disintegrating glaciers, the oil spills, lithium mining and the vanishing mangroves of Mumbai, to the hand of politics and the incessant interplay of human hunger for power and unending need. Is that hunger limited to a few? No. It바카라s a billion times extrapolated, though the degrees may vary. Take the instance of Chie바카라s interpretation of the photograph of her mother standing on the beach in 1969, on the day humankind landed on the moon. To Chie, it is her mom바카라s reminder that one must never forget the price humanity pays for moments of glory because humanity simply doesn바카라t know when to stop.
Harvey makes you question the concept of time itself. As you turn the pages, you are bound to reflect on the inflated ego that humans have come to possess, with the belief that they are 바카라superior바카라 beings who control not just this planet, but other planets and potentially other solar systems too. The capsule goes around the earth 16 times in what we understand to be a 24-hour day, with one sunrise and one sunset, a concept that is so easily put to rest by the speed of the space shuttle. What then is a time zone? That a continent lapses and gives way to another, that the earth so beloved, never stays in your grasp. 바카라That the ride of your life will pass in an eyeblink, just as life does to the aging brain whose slowing makes everything appear to move faster.바카라
I have read the book twice already and yet I feel there is so much more to be shared about it. But I don바카라t want to do that. I would like readers themselves to discover the meaning of Chie바카라s mother바카라s death, the typhoon blowing over the Philippines, Shaun바카라s lessons from the painting 바카라Las Meninas바카라 and so much else that this amazing work has to offer.
Rupinder Pannu Brar is Additional Secretary in the Ministry of Coal, Government of India