I Bring Fresh Flowers : The Astronette And The Rain

Rosemary Brooks has always believed in service. As a child she saluted flags from bedroom windows. As a young woman she volunteered wherever duty called. When Project Rain Dance opened the Astronette Training Center, she stepped forward without hesitation, driven by a faith that felt larger than her fragile frame.

Selected to pilot the first manned weather-control satellite, Rosemary becomes the face of a national dream. Cameras love her. Advertisers circle. The public sees a heroine in a white spacesuit and blue eyes that match the sky she is about to enter. Up there, she is tasked with orienting instruments that promise to tame rain and sun, to turn forecasts into certainty. She does her job. She makes her passes over oceans and continents. Then, during re-entry, something goes wrong.

The nation grieves. Project Rain Dance ends. Yet the spring that follows is unlike any other. Rains fall exactly where they are needed. Fields drink deeply. Cities are washed clean. Flowers bloom in wild profusion. Somewhere between orbit and earth, Rosemary’s mission takes on a meaning no one anticipated. The question that lingers is not what failed during re-entry, but what she may have set in motion before she fell.

Robert F. Young built a career on stories that fused quiet lyricism with speculative daring. His work appeared regularly in magazines such as Galaxy, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Amazing Stories, and Fantastic. He is perhaps best remembered for “The Dandelion Girl,” a time-crossed love story first published in 1961 that remains one of the most reprinted tales of its era. Across decades, Young returned again and again to the meeting point of wonder and human feeling. In “I Bring Fresh Flowers,” that meeting point takes place high above the earth—and then everywhere the rain falls.

Om den här boken

Rosemary Brooks has always believed in service. As a child she saluted flags from bedroom windows. As a young woman she volunteered wherever duty called. When Project Rain Dance opened the Astronette Training Center, she stepped forward without hesitation, driven by a faith that felt larger than her fragile frame.

Selected to pilot the first manned weather-control satellite, Rosemary becomes the face of a national dream. Cameras love her. Advertisers circle. The public sees a heroine in a white spacesuit and blue eyes that match the sky she is about to enter. Up there, she is tasked with orienting instruments that promise to tame rain and sun, to turn forecasts into certainty. She does her job. She makes her passes over oceans and continents. Then, during re-entry, something goes wrong.

The nation grieves. Project Rain Dance ends. Yet the spring that follows is unlike any other. Rains fall exactly where they are needed. Fields drink deeply. Cities are washed clean. Flowers bloom in wild profusion. Somewhere between orbit and earth, Rosemary’s mission takes on a meaning no one anticipated. The question that lingers is not what failed during re-entry, but what she may have set in motion before she fell.

Robert F. Young built a career on stories that fused quiet lyricism with speculative daring. His work appeared regularly in magazines such as Galaxy, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Amazing Stories, and Fantastic. He is perhaps best remembered for “The Dandelion Girl,” a time-crossed love story first published in 1961 that remains one of the most reprinted tales of its era. Across decades, Young returned again and again to the meeting point of wonder and human feeling. In “I Bring Fresh Flowers,” that meeting point takes place high above the earth—and then everywhere the rain falls.

Kom igång med den här boken idag för 0 kr

  • Få full tillgång till alla böcker i appen under provperioden
  • Ingen bindningstid, avsluta när du vill
Prova gratis nu
Mer än 52 000 personer har gett Nextory 5 stjärnor i App Store och på Google Play.

  1. 5.0

    Black Cat Weekly #2

    Robert Silverberg, Frank Lovell Nelson, Hugh Walpole, Randall Garrett, Jeff Cohen, Reginald Bretnor, Robert F. Young, Leslie Ford, Hal Charles, David Brin

  2. Lost Sci-Fi Books 221 thru 240 : Twenty Vintage Sci-Fi Tales Of Space, Mystery And Astonishing Discoveries

    H.P. Lovecraft, Jack Williamson, Clifford D. Simak, Keith Laumer, Michael Shaara, Clark Ashton Smith, Fredric Brown, Henry Kuttner, Ray Cummings, Bryce Walton, Alan E. Nourse, Robert F. Young, Dean Evans, Morrison Colladay, Jerry Shelton, Frank M. Robinson, William Oberfield, Edward W. Ludwig

  3. 50 Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories 4 - More than 29 hours of Vintage Science Fiction : From Mary Shelley to Philip K. Dick — 29 Hours of Sci-Fi That Shaped the Future

    William F. Nolan, Robert Zacks, Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury, Mary Shelley, Mack Reynolds, Edward Halibut, Leigh Brackett, Robert F. Young, Fredric Brown, Robert Silverberg, Jack Williamson, William Hope Hodgson, Evelyn E. Smith, Gordon R. Dickson, Theodore Sturgeon, Clifford D. Simak, Arthur C. Clarke, Robert A. Heinlein, August Derleth, Lawrence M. Jannifer, Ambrose Bierce, Henry Kuttner, Allen K. Lang, Carl W. Ganzlin, H.G. Wells, Margaret St. Clair, Carl Jacobi, Philip K Dick, Andre Norton, Murray Leinster, Ross Rocklynne, Harry Harrison, Frank M. Robinson, Alfred Coppel, Lynn Venable

  4. Lost Sci-Fi Books 231 thru 235 - Five Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1920s, 1940s, 1950s and 1960s

    Morrison Colladay, Keith Laumer, Dean Evans, Robert F. Young, Jerry Shelton

  5. Lost Sci-Fi Books 196 thru 200 - Five Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s and 1960s

    Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, Fritz Leiber, Robert F. Young, Paul Macnamara

  6. #198

    The Blonde From Barsoom

    Robert F. Young

  7. 50 Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories 5 - More than 24 hours of Vintage Science Fiction : Timeless Visions: 50 Sci-Fi Stories from the Minds That Imagined Tomorrow

    Ray Bradbury, Henry Hasse, Keith Laumer, Arthur C. Clarke, Isaac Asimov, Robert F. Young, Fredric Brown, Andre Norton, Philip K Dick, Murray Leinster, George T. Spillman, Gene L. Henderson, Robert Sheckley, Jack Williamson, Frank M. Robinson, Richard Matheson, Bryce Walton, Edmond Hamilton, Ray Cummings, Mike Curry, Scott F. Grenville, Edward W. Ludwig, William Oberfield, Donald F. Daley, Voltaire, Charles Einstein, Miguel Hidalgo, Robert Silverberg, Carl Jacobi, Clifford D. Simak, Donald A. Wollheim, Frederik Pohl, H.G. Wells, Dean Evans, Donald E. Westlake, Charles E. Fritch, Jerry Shelton, Fritz Leiber, Alfred Bester

  8. Space Travelers and Nothing But Space Travelers 6

    Arthur C. Clarke, Fredric Brown, Mack Reynolds, Alfred Coppel, Andre Norton, Robert F. Young, Ray Bradbury, Henry Hasse, Jack Williamson, Gene L. Henderson, Frank M. Robinson, Robert Sheckley, Bryce Walton, Mike Curry, Voltaire, William Oberfield, Donald A. Wollheim, Charles Einstein, Frederik Pohl, Ray Cummings, Alfred Bester

  9. Lost Sci-Fi Books 181 thru 200 - Twenty Lost Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1930s, 40s, 50s and 60s

    Isaac Asimov, Philip K Dick, Ray Bradbury, Arthur C. Clarke, Clifford D. Simak, Murray Leinster, Fritz Leiber, E. M. Forster, Hal Clement, Lynn Venable, Fredric Brown, Mack Reynolds, Margaret St. Clair, Gordon R. Dickson, Carl Jacobi, Paul Macnamara, Robert F. Young

  10. Lost Sci-Fi Books 231 thru 240 - Ten Lost Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1930s, 40s, 50s and 60s

    Clifford D. Simak, Ray Cummings, Jack Williamson, Morrison Colladay, Keith Laumer, Alan E. Nourse, Jerry Shelton, Dean Evans, Robert F. Young, Bryce Walton

  11. Mars and Martians and Nothing But Mars and Martians 2 - Twenty Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories : Martian Mayhem, Mystery, and Mind-Blowing Missions

    Philip K Dick, Isaac Asimov, Clifford D. Simak, Ray Bradbury, Fritz Leiber, Harlan Ellison, Donald A. Wollheim, Harry Harrison, John Wyndham, Frank M. Robinson, Evan Hunter, J. F. Bone, Charles E. Fritch, Robert F. Young, Dick Purcell, Richard R. Smith, Bryce Walton, Alan K. Lang