This Weightless World. A Novel

Author: Soto, Adam

Publication Date:

November 2021

Pages:

304

Original language and publisher

English (USA) | Astra House

Territories Handled

World excl. North America

Genres

Debut Novel, Literary Fiction, Science-Fiction

This Weightless World. A Novel

Author: Soto, Adam

Synopsis

Though the novel gestures toward wider global reactions, Soto wisely focuses on a few specific humans . . . Soto’s characters are finely drawn, as are their philosophically thorny conflicts with each other . . . Amid the discovery of alien life, a touching meditation on humanity. — Kirkus Reviews

Soto brilliantly inverts the inherently outward aspect of the first-contact trope—the idea of seeking salvation in the stars—by forcing his characters to look inward, to question their acquiescence on issues like climate change, police brutality, and the smothering influence of Big-Tech . . . It’s precisely Soto’s refusal to be ‘weighted’ down by decades of genre tradition, to instead turn the trope on its head and in doing so remind us that no-one but ourselves is coming to save us, that makes This Weightless World such an exciting and radical novel. — Ian Monde, Locus Magazine

Adam Soto’s debut, This Weightless World, is a quiet novel, its words wound so tightly that only a sigh escapes the conclusive end. The textual atmosphere is rich, the pace moves across time and universes, and the characters are impossible in the worldliest of ways. — Shinjini Day, Strange Horizons

Set in Silicon Valley and Chicago, This Weightless World considers questions of morality in a world where people feel powerless in the face of formidable systemic forces. — Laura Adamczyk, A.V. Club, ‘5 Books to Read in November’

What I love about This Weightless World is how uncompromisingly complex all the characters are. I feel for them all because I believe they are all essentially good, and yet deeply flawed. — Abbigail Rosewood, The Adroit Journal

Soto wisely centers this complex scenario on three disillusioned protagonists. […] it is a fascinating, sometimes depressing, lens through which to view the human condition. — Booklist

Highly recommended for idealistic and compassionate readers who enjoy scifi and fantasy that reflects on the nature of human empathy surrounding a world-changing event. See Cloud Atlas, 1Q84, Contact, and Station Eleven. — Suncerae Smith, Read Well Reviews

With This Weightless World—and its use of a classic alien contact story to reveal America’s constant struggle with race, class, inequality and mistrust— Adam Soto proves that he gets what science fiction is really about: it’s always the present rather than the far future, and the right here rather than the far away. A fascinating debut. — Tim Maughan, author of Locus Award finalist Infinite Detail

This Weightless World filters its alien encounters and deep-space expeditions, its dreams and anxieties about the centuries to come, through the beating hearts of a few struggling, yearning, fumbling, desperate, modern-day human beings. It’s not so much a novel of ideas, asking, ‘What does the future hold for us?,’ as a novel populated by characters who can’t stop asking themselves that same question. Reading it, I was reminded that caring about the fate of the planet is really a matter of caring about the fates of its billions of distinct and individual inhabitants, with their billions of distinct and individual futures. — Kevin Brockmeier, author of A Brief History of the Dead

What of our current moment is ephemeral, and what is part of some unstoppable machine? By starting with one of the big ‘what ifs’—extraterrestrial contact—Adam Soto charts his own course in looking for the answer. At once utterly ambitious, moving, and intimate, This Weightless World stretches from domestic protests to centuries-distant planets, all while exploring the delicate hopes of its characters. I couldn’t stop reading. The ending was unforgettable. I can’t believe Soto pulled it off! — Kawai Strong Washburn, author of the PEN/Hemingway Award-winning Sharks in the Time of Saviors

The Weightless World is pure polyphony. Adam Soto sets programmers alongside revolutionaries, the contours of love alongside the coruscations of code, the power of classical music alongside the beauty of video games, and he does it all with total authority. Here it is: the social novel for the 21st century. — Robin Sloan, author of Sourdough

Severance meets Roadside Picnic, a literary debut subverting a classic sci-fi trope set in gentrified Chicago, Silicon Valley, and across the vastness of the cosmos.

From the streets of gentrified Chicago, to the tech boom corridors of Silicon Valley, This Weightless World follows a revolving cast of characters after alien contact upends their lives. When a mysterious signal–at first seen as a sign of hope–stops as abruptly as it started, they must grapple with its aftermath.

Sevi is a burned-out music teacher desperate for connection, fighting to find meaning in rekindled love.

Ramona, Sevi’s on-again, off-again girlfriend, is a computer programmer determined to build an AI to prevent mankind’s destruction.

Eason, Sevi’s cello protégé, struggles after his high school in Chicago is shuttered. When an estranged childhood friend asks for help, Eason is forced to measure his commitment to his friend against the chance of escaping neighborhood troubles.

Traversing the Soviet Union, late 2000s America, and the vast expanse of the cosmos, this novel explores the lives of people awaiting a great paradigm shift. A dazzling deconstruction of a science fiction trope, This Weightless World looks to the past for a vision of the future.

Marketing Information

  • Featured in Locus Magazine, Amazing Stories, Writers Digest, BookRiot, LitHub, and The New York Times.
  • Received a favorable comparison in Locus‘s review of Marie-Helene Bertino’s Beautyland published on January 4, 2024