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The Martian Audiobook Review: Wil Wheaton Narrates Weir's First Hit

Andy Weir's The Martian launched his career. We listened to Wil Wheaton's audiobook narration.

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The Martian Audiobook Review: Wil Wheaton Narrates Weir's First Hit

The Survival Science Fiction That Launched Andy Weir

Before Project Hail Mary, there was The Martian (2011). Andy Weir self-published on his website, then serialized it, then it blew up. Wil Wheaton's audiobook narration is one of two available versions (R.C. Bray is the other original narrator). Weir's formula — stranded-alone-solving-problems-with-rigorous-science — was perfected here.

Short answer: Essential Andy Weir starting point. Wil Wheaton's narration brings Mark Watney's wit to audio. 10 hours 53 minutes. Works as a standalone or as prep for Project Hail Mary (both audiobooks share Weir's stranded-survivor formula).

What the Book Is About

Premise: Astronaut Mark Watney is stranded alone on Mars when his crew believes him dead and leaves during an emergency abort. He must survive until either rescue comes or he dies.

Narrative:

  • Watney's first-person log entries (humorous, scientifically rigorous)
  • NASA's mission control on Earth (problem-solving from distance)
  • Watney's crew en route home (discovering he's alive)

Themes:

  • Human problem-solving + ingenuity
  • Science + engineering realism
  • Optimism through adversity
  • Humor as coping mechanism

Wheaton vs Bray Narration

Two audiobook versions exist:

Wil Wheaton:

  • Natural witty delivery
  • Matches Watney's humor well
  • Consistent voice for Watney
  • Acceptable voices for other characters
  • Tonal fit is ideal

R.C. Bray:

  • Character voice differentiation is stronger
  • Audiobook community opinion split on which is better

For most listeners, Wheaton is the preferred choice.

Compared to Project Hail Mary

AspectThe MartianProject Hail Mary
Year20112021
Runtime10h 53m16h 10m
Narrator (Wheaton)Wil Wheaton(Ray Porter)
SettingMarsInterstellar
ProtagonistMark WatneyRyland Grace
ComplexityMediumHigher
HumorHighHigher

Weir's style refined from Martian to PHM. Both essential; PHM might edge out on overall quality, but Martian launched the career.

What Works

Science accuracy: Weir's rigor is the differentiator. Every plot element can be verified against actual NASA/engineering data.

Humor: Watney's wit prevents survival sci-fi from being grim. "I'm going to have to science the shit out of this."

Pacing: Alternating Watney/Mission Control keeps momentum when either solo thread would drag.

Ending: Satisfying resolution that earns its emotional payoff.

What Requires Attention

Technical passages: Some listeners find extended chemistry/physics explanations tedious. Most readers find them fascinating.

Amnesia-free start: Unlike PHM, Martian starts with everything known. Simpler plot setup.

Who Should Listen

Strong fit:

  • Science fiction fans (especially hard sci-fi)
  • NASA/space enthusiasts
  • Engineers and problem-solvers
  • Fans of underdog narratives
  • Commute listeners

Less ideal:

  • Readers wanting emotional/literary depth
  • Those who dislike technical passages
  • Very young listeners (some adult language)

Pros and Cons

Pros: Weir's perfect formula, Wheaton narration captures Watney's voice, science accuracy that rewards attention, humor throughout, 10h 53m is accessible, launched Weir's career for a reason, endlessly rewatched film proves the content works

Cons: Technical passages can drag for non-science readers, ensemble scenes less developed than solo Watney chapters, 2011 prose style slightly dated, Project Hail Mary is arguably better in most dimensions

FAQ

Should I read Martian or PHM first? Martian first chronologically. PHM is more refined. Either order works.

Film comparison? Ridley Scott's 2015 film (Matt Damon). Very faithful adaptation. Book has more technical depth.

Wheaton or Bray? Wheaton for most listeners.

Is this a solo book? Yes, standalone. Artemis (Weir's 2nd book) is unrelated.

Is the science real? Yes — Weir built simulator software to verify every detail.

Sequels? No. Standalone novel.

Bottom Line

The Martian is Andy Weir's first hit + launching pad for Project Hail Mary. Wil Wheaton's narration is ideal. 10 hours 53 minutes of witty survival science fiction. Essential sci-fi listening.

Our rating: 4.7/5 — Docked slightly for PHM being Weir's superior work. Within hard sci-fi audiobook category, excellent.

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