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Artemis
- Narrated by: Rosario Dawson
- Length: 8 hrs and 57 mins
- Categories: Mystery, Thriller & Suspense, Thriller & Suspense
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Publisher's Summary
The best-selling author of The Martian returns with an irresistible new near-future thriller - a heist story set on the moon.
Jazz Bashara is a criminal. Well, sort of. Life on Artemis, the first and only city on the moon, is tough if you're not a rich tourist or an eccentric billionaire. So smuggling in the occasional harmless bit of contraband barely counts, right? Not when you've got debts to pay and your job as a porter barely covers the rent.
Everything changes when Jazz sees the chance to commit the perfect crime, with a reward too lucrative to turn down. But pulling off the impossible is just the start of her problems, as she learns that she's stepped square into a conspiracy for control of Artemis itself - and that now her only chance at survival lies in a gambit even riskier than the first.
Bringing to life Weir's brash, whip-smart protagonist is actress Rosario Dawson (Marvel's The Defenders, Sin City, Death Proof). With the breathless immediacy of one realizing they're one cracked helmet visor away from oblivion, Dawson deftly captures Jazz's first-person perspective – all while delivering sarcastic Weir-ian one-liners and cracking wise in the face of death. And with a cast of diverse characters from all walks of life calling Artemis home, Dawson tonally somersaults to voice Kenyan prime ministers, Ukrainian scientists, and Saudi welders. It's a performance that transports listeners right alongside Jazz, matching her step for step on every lunar inch of her pulse-pounding journey.
Critic Reviews
"An exciting, whip-smart, funny thrill-ride…. one of the best science fiction novels of the year." (Booklist)
"Narrated by a kick-ass leading lady, this thriller has it all – a smart plot, laugh-out-loud funny moments, and really cool science." (Library Journal)
"[A] superior near-future thriller.... Weir leavens the hard SF with a healthy dose of humor." (Publishers Weekly)
"[Narrator Rosario] Dawson makes Jasmine sound like the lovable rogue she is.... Dawson makes listeners care about a diverse cast of characters with quirky mannerisms." (AudioFile)
Featured Article: 20 Best Sci-Fi Audiobooks for Exploring New Worlds
There’s a certain magic in losing yourself in the imaginative world of science fiction. But when new landscapes and realities are paired with brilliant audio performances, the experience is more immersive than ever. We’ve curated some of the best science fiction audiobooks, ranked not only for their vividly constructed narratives, but also for the compelling, stellar narration that brings them to life. So grab your headphones and settle in as reality fades away.
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What listeners say about Artemis
Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- deb
- 12-02-17
way over hyped.
I really loved The Martian. This didn't even come close. It wasn't terrible, but it just sort of sat there....
I have a thing where I feel compelled to finish a book, even if I'm not enjoying it. I had to force myself to finish this one.
102 people found this helpful
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- Love me some
- 02-27-18
Finally a book I didn’t want to turn off…
I can’t tell you how many books I buy and stop listening to after 1-2 hours and I never go back to them,This one was one you couldn’t wait to have an opportunity to turn on again, and normally the space/SYFY ones other than a Stephen King type I’m not that into this is a great read for any fiction lover!
10 people found this helpful
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- will
- 11-18-17
A ferrari with no motor
On the outside, everything about this audio book looks good. The much anticipated sophomoric novel from breakout sci-fi author Andy Weir read by Rosario Dawson is a great preface in itself. Add to it the promise of the first moon colony, some corporate espionage, a lone wolf heroine saboteur and the possibilities are endless. Then it just sits there. And all the aspects that could make it great are that much more annoying. Dawson does a fantastic job narrating. The problem is the characters have no depth, the storyline is swiss cheese and the dialogue is juvenile to an infuriating level. The protagonist delivers wannabe witty sarcasm endlessly and has hardly any likable moments. Humor falls flat at every attempt and there are many, many attempts. Very disappointing. The science is interesting but that can only go so far. If you're looking for the best sci-fi and you haven't done it yet, check out The Expanse series.
711 people found this helpful
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- Ruth Nielsen
- 11-27-17
The opposite of the Martian...
One of the things I really enjoyed about the Martian was a main character who dealt brilliantly with unfortunate circumstances that were caused by forces out of his control. By contrast- Jaz - the main character in Artemis- is totally responsible for one mess after another. Artemis is a story about a supposedly smart person who consistently make very stupid decisions. Jaz attempts to solve each of her problems (which she largely creates) by creating situations that are worse...and each disaster is worse than the last. She’s a liar and a thief - and while she’s very creative in her solutions she is a destructive force in her own life. Not a fan. I listened to Artemis because I enjoyed the Martian so much. If I had listened to Artemis first I doubt I would have picked anything by the same author.
437 people found this helpful
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- Anthony
- 11-19-17
A Book I Truly Wanted to Love
Andy Weir has shown once again he is a master at researching and building a truly amazing sci-fi universe. Unfortunately, his dialogue is juvenile and his story boring. Scientific details aside, the book read like a pre-teen thriller. The characters were all one dimensional and dialogue was appallingly simple. The story was boring at best and read more like a screen play than a rich, deep, and enthralling book.
I honestly wanted to love this book. There is a lot of good substance here, and I hope Andy finds the time to take everything he’s learning to write a book to truly remember. For now, it looks like all we’ll get is a book perfectly suited for a 90 minute movie.
210 people found this helpful
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- Roey Benamotz
- 11-29-17
Really wanted to like this
This has all the right ingredients. Written by Andy Weir, read by Rosario Dawson - what can go wrong?
A lot apparently.
The book is bad. Weak story, awful main character and the science feels artificially placed. It’s good science but it does not drive the plot nor it is very interesting.
As for the performance - I am conflicted. Something was not working. Rosario has great voice, good accents, and the production is very well done. But the overall result is bad. I just don’t know if it’s because Rosario is missing something or just the bad story and awful main character comes to life through her voice and projecting on the performance.
I am still very hopeful and Weir’s next book. The Martian was great and I very hopeful this book is a temporary setback.
94 people found this helpful
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- Robert
- 11-20-17
I was surprised at how mediocre this was
I became a huge Andy Weir fan when I read "The Martian" and later the short 6 minute story called "The Egg". I was so excited for this new Andy Weir book. The first 3 hours I hated it. It was boring, and nothing was done to bring the reader into the characters, especially the main protagonist. After that, the book picked up the pace. It's a short book, so throw out the first 3 hours and it's really short. However, it still amounted to nothing more than an average sci fi story. Had this been my first Andy Weir book, I would have never read another. The reader was good, but her inflections of the main character's voice would not have been the choice my mind would have gone to if I had read this instead of listening. Some of the time she had this so called street smart girl sounding like a dumb valley girl. I could not get into this one. Not at all.
93 people found this helpful
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- Paul Z
- 11-19-17
Formulaic
The Martian was a book while reading you thought this will make a great movie some day, Artemis on the other hand feels like it was written for todays movie audiences as a forethought.
With a great concept, Weir falls short with his heroine, he shows us plenty at how technically astute he is but not so at writing from a woman's perspective, which made the protagonists development weak, leaving less empathy for her actions. The overly ambitious plot has too many holes in it to make Artemis more than just ordinary and to me it had a chance to redeem itself but Weir opted for more of a hollywood ending.
Rosario Dawson has a wide range and delivers a solid performance but the stereotypical accents of some of the characters does not seem accurate for people living in the most diverse city ever.
Artemis just tries too hard not to be The Martian and ends up becoming more like Die Hard on the Moon .
198 people found this helpful
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- Teethnclaws
- 11-17-17
Entertaining; Fun Moon Adventure; Not the Martian
Based on the reviews I've seen, I would suggest listening to this BEFORE the Martian, otherwise, you might be somewhat disappointed with Artemis. If you have read the Martian, I would suggest dialing back your expectations for this one and just try to enjoy it versus comparing it to another one of Weir's books. Sure Weir is very talented - but this isn't Martian 2 - there is going to be some variations on characters, plot, etc. Not every book by an author is going to be spun gold perfection. And it is hard to follow up the success of something like the Martian.
For one, you are not going to be nearly as sympathetic to our protagonist, Jazz, as she is not a stranded scientist struggling to survive until help arrives. Jazz is an under-achieving smuggler hustling her wares within a tiny community of 'loonies' (don't call them that they hate it) colonizing the moon in a cluster of acclimatized spheres [Artemis]. She's lived there nearly her entire life, has a few interesting social connections, and is laboring in near-poverty in hopes of paying off a debt/righting a wrong that has her and her father on the outs.
There is a lot of science, moon, and some space travel stuff to geek out about - much of it sounds rather plausible. But I didn't nitpick, I just tried my best to enjoy the book.
Some bark about the idea of the producers hiring a famous voice to narrate the book when there are plenty of extremely talented voice-actors who could have done a 'better' job. Sure, I agree there are plenty of very talented people who could have read this - they could have treated it like an audio drama and hired a full-cast. Regardless, I think Dawson captured Jazz's brash, rude personality rather well. The other characters, at times, did blur a little, but her overall performance was listen-worthy.
I enjoyed this book. I hope you do too.
203 people found this helpful
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- Philip A
- 11-17-17
Disappointingly Juvenile
This audiobook should have come with a "Young Adult" sticker, warning those in search of grownup fare to steer clear! The introductory blurb on the audiobook gives no indication that the lead character is a kid . . . and because most of her actions are juvenile and her relationships immature and the plotting of the tale is rather plodding . . . I'm posting this as a public service announcement to warn the unsuspecting that this book is not very good. Also, Rosario Dawson does only a so-so job of narrating.
52 people found this helpful
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- David Campbell
- 01-26-20
Oh gosh
I really should have read the reviews because other people have been here before me and could have saved me the time.
Don't come looking for a book of the quality of the Martian. It's not even close.
Don't come looking for a good story, it's predictable, has holes and is uninspiring.
But the killer, for me, is the author's view of how young women think. Wow. You should read the book to experience this.
On a positive note, loved the narrator and production.
24 people found this helpful
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- Simon
- 11-15-17
Jazzed Up Sci-Fi Crime Caper
As The Martian Mark Watney was a real star of a character, his struggles and internal monologues really brought his whole situation to light. He was one of the elite, in the space program and with multiple degrees to his name. Jazz is the same in that she also indulges her narrative in the same low humour but she's progressed a lot less and through rather more dubious routes. If you buy into her you'll likely buy into the story.
This is a fast-moving sci-fi crime caper that gets increasingly out of control as it goes along. It's fun, it's laden with interesting science which I won't try to validate because cleverer than me people are still debating The Martian! I do think Weir lets himself go just a bit more with this one and the final part of the adventure does stretch things a bit but not any more than many authors do.
I'm quite shocked, genuinely, to read some early critical reviews of the narration. I think Dawson is an absolute star in this. She delivers Jazz pretty much perfectly for me and the other characters are easily distinguishable. If you have doubts listen to the audio sample of course and come to your own decision but I'd definitely recommend giving it a chance and not being put off even trying!
So, maybe not quite the all-time classic that The Martian was with of course the great RC Bray but definitely a highly entertaining read if you like this style of humour. Sure, the story has some weaknesses but I still found it thoroughly entertaining.
72 people found this helpful
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- P A WALKER
- 02-19-18
Standing on the shoulder of The Martian
This didn’t work for me. Not the detail of his previous work and the voice actor just didn’t connect. Poor.
28 people found this helpful
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- Sam
- 11-21-17
Hmmm...
Written from a female perspective but is tone deaf in the details; reads more like a male fantasy of the way that a woman thinks and there are some really cringey bits. So...she is a hot, genius, welding, space engineer, smuggler, sci-fi tv geek, who can turn her hand to literally anything and has a smokin’ body: it just got really annoying to read someone’s teenage fantasy of a cool woman rather than a nuanced, developed character.
I loved his first book but this one just drove me crazy and the plot was rather dull, because an arsehole (sorry: anti hero) attempting to commit a crime is not as gripping as someone trying to save their own life by escaping from an impossible situation.
The narration was good - Dawson gave the character as much credibility as she could.
172 people found this helpful
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- Mr. D. M. Edney
- 04-09-18
Very weak. Poor plot, poor central character
What did you like best about Artemis? What did you like least?
Great voice performance, some interesting ideas about the moon base itself.
Really good voice performance by Rosario Dawson, she makes the most of the weak material.
What was most disappointing about Andy Weir’s story?
This is a very immature book, with a plot filled with holes and truly hopeless characters. The choice of language and speech patterns for the lead character are like a middle aged mans idea of how a "sexy young woman" would talk.
Only a man could write a female character like the lead.
She's like a Tesco Value Mark Watney, with needless sexual elements shoe horned into the text in a clumsy manner.
The plot itself is very weak too, failing to stand up to the most rudimentary application of critical thought.
You can see the benefits that Andy Weir had from the long development and continual peer review of "The Martian". none of which is demonstrated in this. The best use I can think of for this book is as an example of why writing a character from a totally different culture/background to yourself is very hard to get right, and painful to read when you get it this wrong.
Do you think Artemis needs a follow-up book? Why or why not?
Absolutely not.
36 people found this helpful
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- Ben Moss-Woodward
- 11-17-17
A book about living in a vacuum that doesn't suck.
I don't get why some people have been giving this only one star. Yes the main character has many failings. However the storyline is compelling and the last half of the book I could barely put down. To be honest I am now hoping for a sequel...
24 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 11-20-17
Not as good as The Martian
It was ok, but The Martian casts a large shadow, it’s hard not to compare premise, realism, narration, humour, protagonist etc and find Artemis lacking.
I likely expected too much, but hoped for science fiction that didn’t lean on the tropes of distant future technology/infrastructure - no matter how well backed by scientific theory - when the authors previous work had tapped into the realisation that an amazing story can be told without too much hand waving, and leaves the audience believing the authors world is one they could live to see and be in.
23 people found this helpful
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- Jamie
- 11-19-17
Predictable
The story seemed like it had promise, but every step was predictable, nothing to make you think.
The narrator did a good job with the material, but overall I found this book very disappointing considering the hype audible gave it.
24 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 05-08-20
Enjoyed the story overall
the ending felt a bit lackluster to me. but its an enjoyable listen. the story overall is ok and the narrator is a solid choice for the characters.
2 people found this helpful
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- Chris W.
- 11-16-17
Brilliant listen
I dont understand the bad reviews.
I have listened to loads of rubbish on here lately and was pleased to have a great book to listen too for a change.
Rosario does a fantastic job with the characters and I totally get the plot.
shes offered a get rich quick scheme it all goes tits up and she has to think on her feet for life or death.
BRILLIANT.
well done Andy weir and well done Rosario Dawson you had me hooked from the start.
33 people found this helpful
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- Kathryn
- 04-07-19
Good enough yarn
Lots of smart-ass banter and high jinx, but this book is missing the heart and soul that Martian delivers. I found myself unable to really connect with Jazz.
That said, a gripping read. You’ll want to find out what happens right to the very last page.
4 people found this helpful
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- Craig
- 11-18-17
Well it's no "The Martian"
I loved The Martian. I have listened to it at least 7-8 times over the years so naturally I expected a lot from Andy.
I feel that no book was ever going to be able to follow The Martian. Will I listen to this book 7 more times....no. Probably won't ever find myself listening to it again to be honest. But I didn't dislike it.
I found 50% of the book just felt like filler. The pen pal story telling was just mostly nonsense and barely added anything to the story. It had a very predictable character arc for Jaz. But it was easy to listen to it in long spells and it was not a long book at all.
Rosario was competent at her narration, though her accents were horrible but didn't make me want to stop listening.
I look forward to Andy's next book.
12 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 07-10-18
A chore to get through
I went into this book hoping for something that could rival The Martian in terms of enjoyment and excitement, but I was severely let down by the thin plot, clunky dialogue and above all, a loathsome protagonist.
There's antiheroes and then there's dislikable and unfortunately I felt Jazz fell into the latter category. Her unnecessary quips did more to infuriate me as the reader rather than getting me on her side and I found myself getting more and more fed up as the plot developed.
Most of the dialogue between her and the (2-dimensional) supporting characters felt forced and it made me wonder if Andy Weir read any of the lines aloud while he was writing them.
Rosario Dawson's narration did not help to redeem the story and I often felt like I may have enjoyed it more if I read the physical book. She played very much into the sarcastic nature of Jazz, presenting many lines with the tone of a spoilt teenager which didn't help the character's likeability, and her accents were so far off that it made me also hate a lot of the supporting characters, purely because I got annoyed any time they spoke.
I forced myself to finish the book but was ultimately disappointed. I feel like Andy Weir built a very interesting world, but was just unable to fill it.
5 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 12-20-17
big let down
the story was silly and the protagonist was frustrating and annoying. i felt the story was rushed.
5 people found this helpful
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- Tony
- 12-17-17
good fun
fun story, good performance, great setting. the action didn't really work that well in audiobook form
5 people found this helpful
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- Tim
- 12-04-17
Disappointing...
Sadly a weak story and lacking respect to science.... Well read though.... A waste it could have been good
8 people found this helpful
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- Karina
- 12-13-17
Fun Read
I enjoyed this mostly but some of the thought processes of the female main character were,... well, a male author making reference to the way the main character looked as a female from a male's perspective. Women don't really say some of the things Jazz says about herself and that took me out of the story on occasion.
7 people found this helpful
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- Shalleycat
- 06-01-20
The Woman on the Moon
Very enjoyable, scientifically accurate romp in 1/6th gravity. Weir develops characters and exciting entertaining plot.
1 person found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 07-30-19
Action Packed with great narration
Fast paced, with interesting technical pieces. Jaz can get annoying in her laziness, mainly when she brags about it, but very good overall.
1 person found this helpful
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- Jimmy
- 04-10-19
I hope this becomes a movie
First of all I need to state the narrators performance was exceptional. She changed between characters smoothly and consistently and provided lots of energy. Secondly, the sorry had a great amount of detail without wafting, which provided a fantastic picture of the story of Jaz. I hope this goes to cinema!
1 person found this helpful