@jmhill

@jmhill

Jason Hill

254 Reads

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Joined a month ago

Texas

Jason Hill's Books by Status

42 Books

See all
The Elves of Cintra
The Rose Field
Words of Radiance
The Artifact
The Eden Paradox
Dark Space
A Wizard of Mars

Jason Hill's Reading Goals

Goal

0/104 books
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2026 Reading Goal

Read 104 books by . They're 50 books behind schedule.

Jason Hill's Most Popular Reviews

Not every story teaches a lesson. Nor are they all meant to. Sometimes, though, we find that a story sets out to spread a message and ends up teaching us something else altogether. The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet is one such example. One can imagine that, at least among fans of the genre, the “space opera” tag comes with certain stereotypes and expectations—grandiose stakes, galaxy-spanning conflicts, high-tech wizardry, and often, a protagonist chosen by fate or prophecy to save the day. But The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet laughs quietly in the corner of that room, sipping tea and choosing, instead, to focus on the spaces between the stars and the people who live in them.

What Becky Chambers offers isn't a tale of destiny, but of community. There's no chosen one here—just a ragtag crew of engineers, clerks, pilots, medics, and algae techs doing a job. The stakes? They're personal, cultural, and emotional. The plot? A meandering, episodic journey through wormholes and diplomatic tensions, yes—but mostly it's a vehicle for character growth, empathy, and belonging.

If the book intended to champion diversity and cooperation (which it clearly did), what it also teaches, almost accidentally, is the radical idea that kindness can be just as compelling as conflict. That sci-fi doesn't have to be about saving the galaxy—it can be about understanding the alien who sits across the dinner table and learning that “different” doesn't mean “less.”

In subverting space opera expectations, Chambers gives us something quietly revolutionary: a future where people of all kinds coexist not because they must, but because they choose to. The message may have been about the journey. But the lesson, perhaps, is that compassion makes for damn good starship fuel.