Kate Greene is an essayist, poet, journalist, and former laser physicist whose work has appeared in Aeon, Harvard Review, the New Yorker, The Economist, and WIRED, among others. She was second-in command on the first simulated Mars mission for NASA's HI-SEAS project. She holds a BS in chemistry, an MS in physics and an MFA in poetry, and has taught writing at Columbia University, San Francisco State University, and the Tennessee Prison for Women. She lives in NYC.
Greene is a talented writer, and her words shine throughout
*Library Journal*
In her thoughtful, well-written account of the mission, Greene
reflects on what this and other space missions can teach us about
ourselves and life on Earth.
*Physics Today*
Filled with wonderment and awe ... Greene's eloquent memoir is
equal parts escape and comfort.
*Publishers Weekly*
Looking for a relatable isolation read after enduring so much
pandemic-fueled social isolation? This may be just the book you
need. Kate Greene's memoir recounts her time spent as a research
participant for NASA in a Mars simulation study. Over the course of
four months, Kate lived in insolation with a handful of other
participants inside a geodesic dome perched along a Hawaiian
volcanic slope. Kate pairs her story of simulating life on Mars
with reflections on her queer identity, her brother's disability,
and more.
*Book Riot*
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