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The Sparrow: A Novel (The Sparrow Series) Spiral-bound
- Print length408 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherGeneric
- Dimensions5.6 x 27.94 x 8.2 inches
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Product details
- ASIN : B09PGM8RRT
- Publisher : Generic
- Language : English
- Print length : 408 pages
- Item Weight : 2.1 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.6 x 27.94 x 8.2 inches
- Book 1 of 2 : The Sparrow Series
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Mary Doria Russell has been called one of the most versatile writers in contemporary American literature. Her novels are critically acclaimed, commercial successes. They are also studied in literature, theology and history courses in colleges and universities across the United States. Mary's guest lectures have proved popular from New Zealand to Germany as well as in the U.S. and Canada.
Her debut novel, THE SPARROW, is considered a classic of speculative fiction, combining elements of First Contact science fiction and a tense courtroom drama. Its sequel, CHILDREN OF GOD, is a sweeping three-generation family saga. Through the voices of unforgettable characters, these novels raise respectful but challenging fundamental questions about religion and faith. Together, the books have won eight regional, national and international awards. They have also been optioned for Hollywood movies starring Antonio Banderas and Brad Pitt, and they have inspired both a rock opera and a full-scale bel canto opera.
Next, Russell turned to 20th century history. A THREAD OF GRACE is the story of the Jewish underground near Genoa during the Nazi occupation of Italy. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, this thriller "moves swiftly, with impressive authority, jostling dialog, vibrant personalities and meticulous, unexpected historical detail. The intensity and intimacy of Russell's storytelling, her sharp character writing and fierce sense of humor bring fresh immediacy to this riveting WWII saga," according to Publisher's Weekly.
Her fourth novel, DREAMERS OF THE DAY, is both a romance and a disturbingly relevant political novel about the 1921 Cairo Peace Conference, when Winston Churchill, T.E. Lawrence and Gertrude Bell invented the modern Middle East. The Washington Post Book World called it "marvelous and rewarding... a stirring story of personal awakening set against the background of a crucial moment in modern history." Nominated for the 2008 IMPAC Dublin Literary Prize, Dreamers of the Day is also being adapted for the stage by Going to Tahiti Productions in New York City.
As a novelist, Mary is known for her exacting research -- no surprise, when you know that she holds a Ph.D. in Biological Anthropology from the University of Michigan. Before leaving Academe to write, Mary taught human gross anatomy at the Case Western Reserve University School of Dentistry. That background came in handy for her fifth novel, DOC, a murder mystery set in Dodge City in 1878, when the unlikely but enduring friendship between Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday began, four years before the famous shoot-out at the O.K. Corral.
"It's about vice, bigotry, violence, and living with a terminal disease," Russell says. "And Doc Holliday is going to break your heart." DOC was nominated for the Pulitzer in 2011, named a Notable Book by the Kansas State Library and won the Great Lakes Great Reads prize. The story has been optioned by Ron Howard and Akiva Goldsman for an HBO series.
Mary is currently at work on the story of the Tombstone gunfight (working title: THE CURE FOR ANGER). "DOC is The Odyssey," she says. "What happened in Tombstone forms the basis of an American Iliad." Expect it in late 2014 from HarperCollins Ecco imprint.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this science fiction novel engaging and thought-provoking, with well-developed characters and interesting theological themes. The book receives mixed feedback regarding its writing quality, with some praising the superb prose while others find it unnecessarily rambling, and its pacing, with some describing it as well-paced while others find it slow-going. The story length and sadness aspects are also mixed, with some appreciating the fascinating Jesuit narrative while others find the plot implausible and the ending depressing.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book engaging and memorable, describing it as a wonderful story that is worth reading.
"...It is definitely worth a read but it can be slow-going until you reach the key material in the final fifty plus pages." Read more
"...Needless to say, the book is told in flashbacks, the report that made it back to Earth and from Sandoz himself, who is the sole survivor of the trip..." Read more
"...I think this was a very engaging novel...." Read more
"...Emotionally and intellectually powerful, this story can upset your life, force a new perspective on your world-view, make you once more sit up and..." Read more
Customers find the premise of the book thought-provoking and engaging, with well-developed themes and vivid descriptions of the new planet.
"...And it pretty quickly became evident. It is a book on the future with its very beginnings apropos of today..." Read more
"...This story for the most part is well thought out and the author does a pretty good job overall of describing scenes and fleshing out the feelings..." Read more
"...has crafted a fine work of character, of people both exceptional and very real, in this tale of first contact between a Jesuit sponsored mission and..." Read more
"...and it shows in this compulsively readable, thoroughly approachable speculation on how interaction with an alien culture impacts humanity in..." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, particularly appreciating its theological content and fundamental spiritual perspective, which educates readers in heart-wrenching ways.
"...in the Kindle edition, were interesting and informative and added key insights. The combination of all of the above led me to my four stars review...." Read more
"...Simply and most obviously, this is a book about the human spirit and the search that all of us seem to go through for a sense of place, of worth and..." Read more
"...But it is a book that handles faith well and for its weaknesses I still strongly recommend it...." Read more
"...powerful, this story can upset your life, force a new perspective on your world-view, make you once more sit up and see the sparrow. ---..." Read more
Customers appreciate the well-developed characters in the book, with one customer noting how they get under the reader's skin, and another highlighting the exceptional portrayal of Jimmy and Anne.
"...good job overall of describing scenes and fleshing out the feelings and perspectives of the characters...." Read more
"...Russell has crafted a fine work of character, of people both exceptional and very real, in this tale of first contact between a Jesuit sponsored..." Read more
"...the book enjoying the intelligence and humor of the dialog and character interaction, falling in love with Russell’s characters, and living in a..." Read more
"...3. Although there was a ton of character development, the characters still same across as one-dimensional caricatures and I didn't care about any of..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the writing quality of the book, with some praising it as wonderfully written and richly described, while others find it gimmicky and not quick reading.
"...is easy to become engrossed in this man's life, as we see him as a great linguist, a priest with very understandable doubts but a solid need to help..." Read more
"...This is a wonderfully-written thinker’s book that encourages the reader to examine the logic of whether God exists, what evil looks like, whether..." Read more
"...Had the writing been a bit tighter, I would have easily given the book a five star rating...." Read more
"...The Sparrow is unlike anything I’ve ever read before. It is a well-written and potent mix of science fiction and theology, highlighted by masterful..." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the sadness in the book, with some finding it hauntingly beautiful while others describe it as heartbreaking and depressing, particularly noting the grim ending.
"...plus years and never completed it because I found it slow going and frustrating...." Read more
"...The story is haunting and beautiful and very sad." Read more
"...Russell kills off Anne, George, Sofia, and Jimmy very quickly and unceremoniously...." Read more
"...The profound sadness of this book lingers, along with grand ideas that I can keep and turn over in my mind like exotic artifacts...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the story length of the book, with some appreciating its great premise and fascinating Jesuit narrative, while others find the storyline moving too slowly and the plot implausible.
"...is a confusing series of staged poor decisions, showcasing only singular moments of decision that propel the “plot” and the next set of questions..." Read more
"...It's a wise and shattering read. Not easy but one that provokes thinking and makes me really attached to characters...." Read more
"...Oops. I recommend this book as good for plot, good for premise, good writing, but bad for hard-core sci fi fans or readers looking for..." Read more
"...As I mentioned, the plot starts slowly--enough so that I might have given up on this except that the reviews of the book had been so powerful that..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it well-paced while others describe it as slow-going.
"...It is definitely worth a read but it can be slow-going until you reach the key material in the final fifty plus pages." Read more
"...It unfolds at its own pace, but it needs to, leaving you with so many things to think about, the subtleties would get lost if went faster...." Read more
"...The problem is that within these chapters the flow of time is incongruous...." Read more
"This is a pretty well-written scifi novel that keeps a pretty good pace and has a good amount of tension that gets pretty well resolved in the end...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2025Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseBook arrived faster than expected and was in excellent condition.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI had picked up The Sparrow at least four times over seven plus years and never completed it because I found it slow going and frustrating. I found Father Emilio Sandoz’s ongoing refusal to discuss what happened on Rakhat, the alien planet, needlessly frustrating. The cute banter between other characters also eventually made me stop reading, but I finally made a determined effort to finish the book in 2025 and I’m glad that I did. The tragedy surrounding what occurs in the very late stages of the book and Father Sandoz’s theological insights, or, more accurately, his existential despair, resonated with me. The author’s 20th anniversary insights, possibly only available in the Kindle edition, were interesting and informative and added key insights. The combination of all of the above led me to my four stars review. Had the writing been a bit tighter, I would have easily given the book a five star rating. It is definitely worth a read but it can be slow-going until you reach the key material in the final fifty plus pages.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2021Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseAt over 500 pages counting the Afterword and appendices, "The Sparrow" is too thick for me to find room for it on my shelves, so I am sending it to a beloved (and celibate) ex-girlfriend who years ago sent me Martin Scorsese's passion project "Silence," about Jesuits in Japan in the seventeenth century. I couldn't think of a person who would more want to read a story about the first Jesuits to go to Alpha Centauri.
The aliens on a planet orbiting the smallest of the three suns that make up the Centauri system are very different from those in "The Three-Body Problem," another very popular novel in which it turns out there is intelligent life there. They are just beginning to see what radio can be used for and one of the first transmissions of their music is picked up by an astronomer at the Arecibio Radio Telescope in Puerto Rico. One of the first people he tells that he has picked up an extraterrestrial signal is the hero of the book, Jesuit priest Emilio Sandoz, who has recently returned home to the island after years of short-term missions to deprived people all over Earth. He immediately recruits the astronomer, his three other closest friends, and three other Jesuits to travel to the planet, named Rakhat by its inhabitants, in a hollowed-out asteroid at an average of 25% of c.
Mary Doria Russell's only mistake with this book was setting it within her own lifetime (it starts in the mid-2010s). It will probably be the 2110s before we have Australians on Mars and miners throughout the asteroid belt (assuming we can avoid a Third World War or comprehensive environmental collapse). The book ends in 2060, when as one character observes the population of Earth is nearly 16 billion (which isn't going to happen by then, or probably ever). Even in the 2010s the technological singularity is approaching; you pretty much need to have a Ph.D. to have a job. Most other jobs are being handed over to AIs taught by the last humans to do those jobs and set up by indentured servants like Sofia Mendes, the second-most compelling character in the book.
I caught myself doing something that these days, I only do for the best novels: casting the movie version in my head. The thing is, like "Dune," this book is too sprawling to be told with a single two- or even three-hour movie. It is divided into 3 acts, each of which should be its own movie. The first act is Sandoz's life and friendships on Earth and on the (from their perspective brief) journey inside the asteroid to Rakhat. The second act is Rakhat itself. These two acts are told in flashback through the memory of Sandoz, who in the third act is the only human who makes it back alive (though horribly maimed) to Earth. The first movie could be named "Scientists," the second could be "Missionaries" and the third could only be "Priests" since literally everyone Sandoz interacts with after returning to Earth is a Jesuit.
Maybe I would change a few things for the third movie (such as giving the humans more than one rifle, which might have changed the course of events), but nothing for the first two. I really shouldn't have wanted a happy ending for this book. It is too powerful. Six stars.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2019Format: KindleVerified PurchaseLike at least two others who have read and reviewed this book, I purchased it because I had read something else by Mary Doria Russell and had enjoyed it very much. Then I realized that it had been categorized as science fiction. I don't have a problem with science fiction but I also don't read it often and for some reason I hesitated to begin reading this. Still I eventually reached a point where I reached for it, determined to find out why this author wrote this form of story, when I had so enjoyed a WESTERN by her.
And it pretty quickly became evident. It is a book on the future with its very beginnings apropos of today (and the early part of the book does indeed begin almost this year — what a shock!). Simply and most obviously, this is a book about the human spirit and the search that all of us seem to go through for a sense of place, of worth and meaning. So much more than I ever envisioned when I bought the book or began the book.
The story kicks off in the year 2059 with a Jesuit priest who has been 'rescued' from a mission to the planet Rakhat. Remember that this is indeed the beginning of the book and as a plot will finish the story, but it really begins with a group of disparate people who slowly come together: the Jesuit Emilio Sandoz who has spent his career in the Society of Jesus, traveling the world as a linguist but never staying for very long until he returns to the place where he grew up, the small village of La Perla in Puerto Rico.
It is there that he meets the others: A retired engineer and his physician wife; a technician working at a listening station seeking transmissions from other worlds and Sofia Mendez, an artificial intelligence specialist. They form strong bonds and relationships with each other and it is those ties that bind when the technician hears singing from a distant planet. He shares the discovery with his friends but it most strongly resonates with Sandoz, who has struggled with his faith but sees the songs as a sign that it is God's will that this group of people not only have come together for this moment but that it is for them to travel to the planet and learn about the creators of the songs.
Needless to say, the book is told in flashbacks, the report that made it back to Earth and from Sandoz himself, who is the sole survivor of the trip, as a broken man barely holding together mentally, as well as physically. And it is to him to make sense of the trip and the experiences he faced.
This is the main focus and what sets this book far from being just — if you can say that without demeaning the genre — science fiction. For ultimately this is a story about a man who in one of the characters words came very close to God, who felt the rapture of belief and then has his faith perhaps irreparably shattered by what happens during the trip he once thought was planned by God.
It is what makes this so hard to write, to frame and give a true reflection to what this book is all about because whether we are believers or not, we feel and know what Emilio Sandoz is going through. As others have said this is really a philosophical novel. Nancy Pearl of "Library Journal" describes it as about the nature of good and evil and what happens when a man tries to do the right thing, for the right reasons and ends up causing incalculable harm. I agree.
This is an amazing book and well worth all the honors that it has received. It's sometimes difficult reading. The story is haunting and beautiful and very sad.
Top reviews from other countries
- AJReviewed in Australia on September 20, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Blood-curdlingly and beautiful
The ending is horrific and not for the faint of heart - cannot exaggerate this. Yet everything fits together with great deftness and delicacy.
It's difficult to describe a book that weaves together so many disparate scientific fields seamlessly, with unexpected characters full of pathos, in a delicate puzzle.
Fair warning, the first 20-40% is terribly slow and then it explodes! Absolutely phenomenal past that and worth the investment.
-
9unidine9Reviewed in Germany on August 4, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Interessant
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseIch hatte das Buch second hand bestellt. Ich wusste nicht so ganz was man bei einer Gebrauchtversion erwarten kann aber wurde positiv überrascht. Es kam in sehr guter Verfassung an obwohl es schon deutlich oft gelesen wurde.
Ich habe noch einen Zettel in den Seiten gefunden, der von der Mutter oder dem Vater vergessen wurde rauszunehmen: Es ist ein Grundschul Englisch Test ihres/seines Sohnes, sehr süß finde ich also macht es mir natürlich nichts aus. Wenn man dem Klebezettel auf dem Buchrücken, dem durchsichtigen Umschlag und dem Stempel auf der ersten Seite trauen darf ist das Buch davor wahrscheinlich in einer Bibliothek auszuleihen gewesen. Das Buch kam außerdem im angemessenen Zeitrahmen an.
Alles in allem eine sehr interessante Bestellung und ich bin mehr als zufrieden mit dem Buch (mit dem ganzen drum herum aber mit dem Inhalt noch viel mehr).
- peggysue23Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 11, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars the misunderstandings that arise especially regarding contact with the ruling Ja'anata and the struggle Emilio Sandoz undergoes
This is one of the few books that I have read in recent months that I have found difficultt o put down and yet did not want it to end. The story has stayed with me and I find myself returning to some of its themes. Russlee employs a science fiction background to explore themes of friendship, belief, trust, powere and accepted conventions to an effective degree. Providing one is able to suspend disbelief regarding the means of interstelllar travel ( using adapted asteroids) then all else becomes believable and a challenging to read. The key character - Father Emilio Sandoz - is a jesuit priest with a skill in languages and conflict regarding his postion in the priesthood. His early life has mirrored the jesuit philosopy of evangelization and exploration but by he time the novel begins doubst have begin to arise. Responding to a signal from a planet ( Rakhat) he and a small group of people set forth on what can be seen as a 'mission' to explore the source of the signal. Events rapidly unravel espcially when contact is made with the indigenous population which had, over the centuries, evolved into two distinct groups and a stable society but one whose practices are unethical to the mission group.
The loss of the original party, the misunderstandings that arise especially regarding contact with the ruling Ja'anata and the struggle Emilio Sandoz
undergoes regarding his belief in a god and his postion in the jesuit order are beautifully told and I am still mulling over some of the points to come out of the book. There is no facile redemption in this book and the ending is uncomfortable. I would suggest, also, reading " Children of God" which is essentiallya sequel and in whihc many of the unfinshed threads of the first book are bought together. Also not an easy read but worthy of another 5 stars
-
monteveritaReviewed in Japan on March 29, 2006
5.0 out of 5 stars たとえ一羽の雀でも
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchaseワーナーブラザーズがこの小説の映画化権を獲得し、ブラッド・ピットが共同製作・出演予定というニュースを知って、読んでみました。ミーハー根性丸出し。
2059年、イエズス会が計画した惑星Rakhatの探索が無惨な失敗に終わり、心身に深い傷を負った唯一の生還者エミリオ・サンドス神父は頑なに沈黙し続け、信仰を捨てようとしている――という興味をそそられる導入部で始まる物語は、Rakhatとの最初の接触から探索員たちが旅立つまでを描く2019年、Rakhatへ向かう(地球時間で)約18年の旅、Rakhatでの4年間の出来事が交錯し、神の名の許に異星を訪れた地球人が彼の地とその人々に何をもたらし、何が起きたかが次第に明らかになっていきます。
マタイ伝の一節からの引用であるタイトルを始め、キリスト教に関係する用語や固有名詞が数多く登場しますが、終盤のサンドス神父の凄惨な告白に至るまでのスリリングな展開、やや類型的ながらも個性豊かな登場人物たちの示唆に富んだ思索と会話の妙には、私のような無宗教者でも静かな感動が訪れる結末まで飽きることなく惹きつけられました。
キリスト教とイエズス会の辿った歴史を彷彿とさせるエピソードや暗喩は、クリスチャンの読者にはことさら興味深いものと思われます。
絶望の果てに一条の光を見出しかけたサンドス神父に再び試練が訪れることを予感させるラストシーンは、続編 "Children of God" に繋がっていくようです。
さて、映画化が実現したら、ブラピの役は何だろう?残念ながら、サンドス神父はイメージが違うか。いずれにしても楽しみです。
- SusannahReadsReviewed in Canada on October 16, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Subtlety, Elegance and Soul
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI’m older than dirt; and in addition to being a bookworm with a wide range of interests, I’m also a lover of science fiction and fantasy. I cut my teeth on the likes of Isaac Azimov, Arthur C. Clarke, J.R.R. Tolkien, et al, which should give you some idea of my vintage.
Before downloading an ebook, I usually check the one-star and three-star Amazon reviews to see the downside of the story and balance out the glowing reviews. Once I’ve read a few pages, I make my decision whether or not to download--probably influenced more by the writing than the reviews.
Often I’m disappointed. On the other hand, I’m occasionally surprised and delighted to discover, tucked into the ever-expanding world of self-published writers (“instant authors,” as it were), the occasional pearl in the ocean of mediocre science fiction/fantasy series.
This is one such book.
Reading the lower-rated reviews, I saw confusion, outright dislike, and hard words directed at this author’s work. They almost persuaded me to move on and find something more popular, but there was a hint in the book’s blurb that indicated there could be more to it than what was considered bad writing. (I’m a copy editor—and, trust me, I’ve seen plenty of truly terrible writing in this genre.)
Long story short, I downloaded the book from my public library, read it--and immediately signed in to Amazon to buy it for my own digital library, along with the sequel.
Other reviewers outline the story, so I won’t here. But I will address a couple of the concerns that gave rise to some hard judgements:
Yes, it has a slower plot than many of the more recent books in this genre (which seem to have been written mostly for fast action, lots of sex, and quick sales for the writer). Some of the technical aspects of space travel may well require brief suspensions of belief—but my take is that if you’re put off by that, then you’d be better served by reading a science book.
The focus of this book isn't space travel anyway, but rather one man’s journey through love and hate, into his soul and back, as it traces the spiritual and psychological history of Emilio Sandoz.
To me, it harkens back to the olden days of the genre, where subtlety and elegance were still important elements of a story. If these attributes are important to you, then you’ll probably feel much the same as I did about the book.
And now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to start reading the sequel.