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85 chapters - View chapters and summaries
| Name | Aliases | Role |
|---|---|---|
Mark Watney Botanist and mechanical engineer on the Ares 3 mission | Protagonist | |
Alex Vogel Chemist on Ares 3, from Germany | Supporting | |
Annie Montrose Director of Media Relations at NASA | Supporting | |
Beth Johanssen Systems operator and reactor technician on Ares 3 | Supporting | |
Chris Beck Flight surgeon and EVA specialist on Ares 3 | Supporting | |
Melissa Lewis Commander of the Ares 3 mission | Supporting | |
Mindy Park Satellite communications operator at NASA. | Supporting | |
Mitch Henderson Flight Director at NASA | Supporting | |
Rich Purnell Astrodynamicist at JPL | Supporting | |
Rick Martinez Pilot of the Ares 3 mission. | Supporting | |
Teddy Sanders Director of NASA | Supporting | |
Venkat Kapoor Director of Mars Operations at NASA | Supporting |
| Name | Type |
|---|---|
| Ares 3 Crew | Faction |
| Mission Control | Faction |
| NASA Leadership | Faction |
| Date | Event | Details |
|---|---|---|
2011 | Publication | The self-published origins of The Martian - posted chapter by chapter on Andy Weir's website before being picked up by a major publisher - were widely noted as a remarkable publishing story in their own right. The novel received strong critical praise for its scientific rigour and the wit of Mark Watney's narration, and word of mouth drove significant commercial success. It won the Locus Award for Best First Novel in 2013 and the subsequent Ridley Scott film adaptation brought it to a global audience. |
2015 | Award Nominated | John W. Campbell Memorial Award Finalist |
2015 | Award Won | Geffen Award |
SF book category
2015 | Award Won | Ignotus Award Foreign novel category |
2015 | Award Won | Seiun Award Translated novel category |
The self-published origins of The Martian - posted chapter by chapter on Andy Weir's website before being picked up by a major publisher - were widely noted as a remarkable publishing story in their own right. The novel received strong critical praise for its scientific rigour and the wit of Mark Watney's narration, and word of mouth drove significant commercial success. It won the Locus Award for Best First Novel in 2013 and the subsequent Ridley Scott film adaptation brought it to a global audience.
John W. Campbell Memorial Award
Finalist
Geffen Award
SF book category
Ignotus Award
Foreign novel category
Seiun Award
Translated novel category