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In the Quick

A Novel

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GOOD MORNING AMERICA BUZZ PICK • A young, ambitious female astronaut’s life is upended by a love affair that threatens the rescue of a lost crew in this brilliantly imagined novel “with echoes of Station Eleven, The Martian, and, yes, Jane Eyre” (Observer).
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY VULTURE AND SHE READS • “The female astronaut novel we never knew we needed.”—Entertainment Weekly

June is a brilliant but difficult girl with a gift for mechanical invention who leaves home to begin grueling astronaut training at the National Space Program. Younger by two years than her classmates at Peter Reed, the school on campus named for her uncle, she flourishes in her classes but struggles to make friends and find true intellectual peers. Six years later, she has gained a coveted post as an engineer on a space station—and a hard-won sense of belonging—but is haunted by the mystery of Inquiry, a revolutionary spacecraft powered by her beloved late uncle’s fuel cells. The spacecraft went missing when June was twelve years old, and while the rest of the world seems to have forgotten the crew, June alone has evidence that makes her believe they are still alive.
She seeks out James, her uncle’s former protégé, also brilliant, also difficult, who has been trying to discover why Inquiry’s fuel cells failed. James and June forge an intense intellectual bond that becomes an electric attraction. But the relationship that develops between them as they work to solve the fuel cell’s fatal flaw threatens to destroy everything they’ve worked so hard to create—and any chance of bringing the Inquiry crew home alive.
A propulsive narrative of one woman’s persistence and journey to self-discovery, In the Quick is an exploration of the strengths and limits of human ability in the face of hardship, and the costs of human ingenuity.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 11, 2021
      In Day’s uneven latest (after If, Then), a precocious girl grows up to be an astronaut in a near future of expanded space exploration. June Reed, 12, lives with her aunt Regina, who raised her along with June’s late uncle Peter, a brilliant engineer for the National Space Program. Shortly before Peter died, he developed a fuel cell for Inquiry, a spacecraft that lost power as it was beginning its orbit around Saturn. After June hears that the blame is being put on a fuel cell malfunction, she becomes obsessed with fixing the design flaw and rescuing the four astronauts aboard the craft, and Regina sends the mischievous June away to boarding school to prep for astronaut training. Despite being younger than her peers, June’s tenacity earns her a spot on a space station, where she and her uncle’s protégé fix the faulty cell to power a rescue shuttle. While Day does a decent job developing June as a curious girl who claims to be “better with machines than with people,” the haphazard plot feels rushed and the prose can be clunky (“My eyelids were like lead. They lowered. They lowered. They lowered again”). This is primed for launch, but it doesn’t really take off. Agent: Brettne Bloom, the Book Group.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2021
      Day's latest (after If, Then, 2019) features a protagonist who is a real space case. June's uncle invented the batteries that will power the next generation of space travel, but there's a fatal flaw that no one catches until it's too late. Haunted by this failure, June becomes one of the youngest astronauts in history due to her unique problem-solving perspective. Will she be able to fulfill her uncle's legacy before it's too late and figure out her own love life, all while living on the surface of a hostile planet? June's path to the stars, as well as the science behind the trip, feels both realistic and accessible. Day's descriptions of the cold lethality of space make the final frontier feel like a character itself, and, indeed, each location described feels tangible. The action sequences are brutal and breathtaking, but the novel focuses most on June's emotions and relationships with her fellow trainees and astronauts. Perfect for fans of realistic depictions of space travel like Andy Weir's The Martian (2014) and Jeremy K. Brown's Zero Limit (2018).

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2021
      In the near-ish future, a gifted engineer dreams of repairing the flaw in the fuel cells designed by her uncle that doomed a long-distance space mission. Her uncle has recently died when narrator June is sent to the school named for him on the National Space Program campus. She's only 12, but she has learned from her famous uncle to always ask of a piece of machinery, "What does it do?" This phrase echoes throughout the text as June trains for work in space; Day does a terrific job of making an engineer's thought process as exciting as a thriller's chase scenes. June and her classmates are obsessed with Inquiry, the first-ever craft using the fuel cells invented by her uncle with a team of his students, which has lost propulsion control while orbiting Saturn. Some of them helped design the fuel cells, others have friends or lovers on the crew, so all are devastated when NSP cancels a planned rescue mission in Endurance, a craft powered by the same suspect cells. The novel blends fraught personal relationships with intricate engineering as the narrative moves forward six years, when June is sent to the Pink Planet to work with James, one of her uncle's students, whose debates with his lover, Theresa, about the fuel cell design forecast similar conflict between him and June while they work on repairing the cells' flaw. Nonetheless, they become intimate--until she uncovers a grim secret that ruptures their partnership. June flees the station into the Pink Planet's unforgiving atmosphere, nearly dying in a harrowing scene that again displays Day's gift for gripping suspense that unfolds largely in the narrator's head. Regrettably, the author is not as skilled at gathering together her plot strands, and an abrupt ending leaves many unanswered questions about the characters she has somewhat elliptically developed. An interesting idea that doesn't quite gel.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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