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The Sound of a Thousand Stars by Rachel Robbins

The Sound of a Thousand Stars

by Rachel Robbins

Pub Date: Oct. 8th, 2024
ISBN: 9781639108961
Publisher: Alcove Press

A female physicist from an affluent family and a poor engineer begin a fraught romance while working on the Manhattan Project in Robbins’ historical novel.

In 1944, Alice Katz and Caleb Blum begin working on the fiercely secretive Manhattan Project in Los Alamos, New Mexico, under the tutelage of the famous J. Robert Oppenheimer. They have little in common—she has a doctorate in physics and hails from a wildly wealthy background while his Orthodox Jewish family is so destitute he cannot afford to continue his academic studies in engineering. He works for the Special Engineer Detachment, an outfit often looked down upon as a cohort of expendable grunts, while Alice is handpicked by Oppenheimer as one of his “preferred understudies,” though she still contends with the unabashed chauvinism of her male colleagues. Despite the circumstances that separate them, the pair falls deeply in love; the affair is given room to grow when Alice’s fiancé, Warren, dies serving in the war and she subsequently discovers she is pregnant with Caleb’s child. In this powerful historical narrative, the obstacles to the protagonists’ union are legion, including Caleb’s reluctance to disclose the inauspiciousness of his origins. Robbins artfully creates an atmosphere of world-historical dread—only slowly, and with growing horror, do Caleb and Alice learn the full truth of what they are producing at Los Alamos. The story also charts the forlorn plight of Haruki Sato, a Japanese native of Hiroshima whose entire life is haunted by the atomic monstrosity to which both Caleb and Alice contribute. The novel is spangled with sparklingly insightful portraits of major scientific figures like Oppenheimer, Bohr, and Feynman, and the author demonstrates an impressive command of the relevant science as well. This is a moving blend of fact, fiction, and romance.

An absorbing novel that radiates historical rigor and emotional astuteness.