Range
“After an astrophysics professor craving solitude moves to a sparsely populated rural area, she finds it’s harder to get away from other people than she thought.”—The New York Times Book Review
Gunn Haven, professor of astrophysics, has taken a leave from the institute where she teaches and moved to a rural area. She’s here for the clear night sky and for solitude as she tracks gamma-ray bursts and researches the origins of the universe.
But while Gunn studies celestial bodies, she is also contending with earthly bodies. There are her nearest neighbors: Brit, who knows everyone’s business, and Jenny, Brit’s restless teenage daughter. There is her young protégé; Gunn has sent him away to find his own path, yet longs to have him close. There are remote colleagues and dead loved ones, often in her thoughts. And there is the menacing Gable Woman, who, after catching Gunn wandering onto private property, is intent on putting her in her place.
How to navigate the human-made boundaries of a boundless universe? How to be a caretaker if you’re not a mother and stand apart in your communities? Gunn’s mind ranges over these questions as she splits firewood, walks the forest, solves equations, sits in hunting stands, lies in fields, and observes—the animals, the locals, the seasons, the stars, her memories. Reaching from the everyday to the infinite, from sensory details to contemplations of the cosmos, Range is a gripping investigation of the many kinds of distance we cross through space and time.
Praise
“In this stirring work, Nors has done the impossible: given shape to the twin mysteries of identity and consciousness without pinning either down. A brilliant novel that is as intellectually vast as it is deeply rooted in the everyday experience of being human.”—Kirkus (starred review)
“As ‘the stars stand still’ and ‘the planets wander,’ a secluded astrophysicist accepts the solace of found family in the affecting novel Range.”—Michelle Anne Schingler, Foreword Reviews
“In the latest novel from Lit Hub favorite Dorthe Nors, an astrophysicist retreatst to the country to concentrate on the stars—but can’t seem to get away from the messy, compelling humanity that surrounds her, leaving her shifting her attention from the enormous to the minute and back again.”—Literary Hub
“Nors’s novel follows a professor of astrophysics who has taken a leave from the institute where she teaches and moved to a rural area, kicking off a meditation on space, time, identity, and consciousness.”—The Millions