The road to Roswell A novel

Connie Willis

Book - 2023

"When level-headed Francie arrives in Roswell, New Mexico, for her college roommate's UFO-themed wedding-complete with a true-believer bridegroom-she can't help but roll her eyes at all the wide-eyed talk of aliens, which obviously don't exist. Imagine her surprise, then, when she is abducted by one"--

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Subjects
Genres
Fiction
Humorous fiction
Novels
Romance fiction
Science fiction
Published
New York : Del Rey [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Connie Willis (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
399 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593499856
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Aliens and westerns go together like tequila and lime in Willis' screwball comedy about an alien on a mission and the woman it abducts to drive it there. Sensible Francie only agreed to attend her friend's alien-themed wedding in Roswell to talk her out of marrying a "UFO nut." Instead, Francie is abducted by an animated tumbleweed and forced to drive through the desert in search of something it seems not to know the location of. At first afraid, Francie gradually comes to believe it has good intentions. A chance encounter leads the alien to snatch handsome con man Wade, who nicknames it "Indy" for its whip-like tentacles, followed by a UFO doomsdayer, a little old lady cardsharp, and a western film buff. Willis peppers this madcap adventure with spot-on references to westerns, UFO sightings, Roswell history, and more as Indy's posse careers through the southwestern U.S., with Indy also playing matchmaker to Francie and Wade. The story relies heavily on dialogue and miscommunication; the characters' speculative, meandering conversations guessing the alien's motivations are often funny but repetitive. Still, Willis' fans will enjoy this lighthearted genre blend.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Multiple Hugo and Nebula Award winner Willis (Blackout/All Clear) returns with a delightful, intergalactic twist on the romantic comedy. Francie only agrees to show up for her college roommate's doomed wedding in Roswell, N.Mex., because she hopes her presence will make the bride-to-be realize she's making a mistake. That, and she's the maid of honor. The wedding and the town's annual UFO Festival are not falling on the same weekend by coincidence; the groom is a true believer. Meanwhile, skeptical Francie can barely stand every moment she has to spend hearing about sightings, theories, and abductions. Then she herself is abducted by an alien who needs her help navigating the New Mexican desert. Her abductor, nicknamed Indy, is described as looking like a "animate tumbleweed," with dozens of quick, strong tentacles that it has no issue using to keep Francie acting as its chauffeur. A chance encounter with a friendly and handsome hitchhiker, Wade, a con man, adds one more to the madcap road trip, and each subsequent stop continues to grow the wacky crew. For Francie, terror turns to acceptance that turns to curiosity that turns to care as she comes to believe that Indy is just trying to get home. Willis makes Francie's journey to, from, and around Roswell an absolute blast with abundant humor, copious references to old westerns, and sweet budding love between Francie and Wade. Readers will not be disappointed. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Francie, an alien skeptic, is in Roswell, NM, for her best friend's UFO-themed wedding when she is abducted by a tumbleweed-shaped alien. The alien can only communicate by gesturing with his tentacles, but he clearly wants her to take him somewhere outside of Roswell. Along the way, they pick up additional abductees: handsome con man Wade, increasingly unhinged UFO conspiracy theorist Lyle, card shark Eula Mae, and Western movie--loving Joseph. Francie quickly begins to care for the alien, whom she and Wade nickname "Indy" for the way he uses his tentacles like whips (a reference to Indiana Jones). Jesse Vilinsky skillfully narrates Willis's novel, offering an animated, brisk performance and giving each character a unique, easily distinguishable voice. Her narration of Indy's gestures perfectly brings out his lively and endearing personality. Vilinsky's comedic delivery is exquisitely timed, and she also communicates the sensitive side of this engaging story, imbuing the characters' relationships with depth and charm. VERDICT Listeners will be over the moon with Hugo and Nebula Award winner Willis's (Crosstalk) latest comedic gem, narrated by a voice actor at the top of her game.--B. Allison Gray

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A skeptic abducted by an extraterrestrial with a mission finds herself on a road trip around the desert in Willis' latest cheerily frenetic genre-blending romp. Francie Driscoll's college roommate and best friend, Serena, has a habit of getting engaged to the wrong guy. So when Serena announces that she's marrying a true believer at the UFO museum in Roswell, New Mexico, Francie agrees to be her maid of honor, hoping she can help bring her friend back down to Earth. As Francie is retrieving wedding decorations from Serena's car, a tentacled life form resembling a tumbleweed grabs her and forces her on the road. They pick up oddballs like burrs: Wade, a hitchhiker; Eula Mae, a retiree who frequents casinos for the free buffets; Lyle, a UFO nut; Joseph, a fan of classic Western movies who's touring his favorite film locations in an RV (though he insists on calling it a Western trail wagon). Francie and Wade nickname their captor Indy, for Indiana Jones, and try to figure out what "he" wants, where "he" is trying to get to, and how to communicate with "him," soon concluding that Indy is benevolent and needs help. Willis shapes readers' expectations by tossing around hints and clues in the form of references to various genres--science fiction, Western, romantic comedy--until it's not a surprise but a pleasantly satisfied expectation to discover that this or that character is not who he or she (or it) appears to be. A few logic problems strain credulity: For example, how does Francie survive more than 24 hours in the desert without water with no sign of heat stroke or even much thirst? How does Indy both understand everything Francie and Wade are saying and need to be taught English? But it's easy to suspend disbelief, and churlish not to. There's nobody quite like Willis for good-hearted, fast-paced fun. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Paul: Yeah, well, you're killin' yourself. A friend can't be worth that. Hogy: Well now, how would you know? Did you ever have one? --The Virginian Serena wasn't in the airport waiting area when Francie got off the plane in Albuquerque, but a man carrying a sign reading FIRST CONTACT COMMITTEE--WELCOME TO THE UFO FESTIVAL was. UFO Festival? Serena hadn't said anything about a UFO festival going on at the same time as her wedding. Maybe it's not in Roswell, Francie thought hopefully. But of course it was. Where else would a UFO festival be? And as if to confirm that, here came two guys in Star Trek uniforms and Spock ears, hurrying up to greet a third in a silver unitard and a gray alien mask with large black almond-shaped eyes and no nose. Thank goodness I didn't succeed in talking Ted into being my plus-one for this wedding, she thought. Or worse, Graham. She'd tried to talk somebody, anybody, from work into coming with her so Serena wouldn't try to fix her up with someone, but when she'd told them where the wedding was, they'd all said no. "Roswell?" Graham had said. "The place with all the UFO nut jobs?" "Why is it in Roswell?" Ted had asked. "Does your friend live there?" "No, she lives in Phoenix. They're just having the wedding in Roswell." "Why?" Graham said. "Why would anyone in their right mind go to Roswell?" and she'd been forced to tell them that Serena was marrying one of those selfsame UFO nut jobs, at which point both of them had not only refused to be her plus-one but told her she was crazy for going herself. "I have to," she'd told them. "Serena asked me to be her maid of honor, and she's one of my very best friends. She was my freshman roommate in college. We have a special bond." "A special bond?" Graham had said. "What are you, Sisters of the Traveling Pants or something?" "No," she'd said defensively, "but I owe her a lot. She saved my life when I was a freshman," and tried to explain how, when she'd arrived at college in Tucson, knowing no one, homesick for New England, and shocked by the heat and barrenness of the Southwest, Serena had kept her from getting on the first plane home. She'd shown her around campus, introduced her to people, taught her what tumbleweeds and javelinas and saguaros were, and convinced her there weren't any rattlesnakes on campus (which would definitely have sent Francie screaming back to Connecticut). And when Francie's high school boyfriend had broken up with her two weeks later, Serena'd sat with her while she'd sobbed, told her "he wasn't right for you at all," and generally patched her back together. "She's been a terrific friend," Francie said. "Sympathetic, funny, and--" "And out of her mind if she believes all this aliens-from-outer-space garbage," Graham had said. "I don't know about you, but it's my policy to avoid nut jobs, old roommates or not." Ted nodded. "I had a roommate my sophomore year who believed birds were spying on him. You don't catch me going to his wedding." "She isn't a nut job," Francie protested. "She's just a little . . . ditzy, and inclined to go along with what her boyfriends think." And she has terrible taste in men, Francie added silently. Worse than terrible. When Francie first met her, Serena had been dating a kamikaze BASE jumper who'd wanted her to dive headfirst into the Grand Canyon with him, and her taste hadn't improved since then. She'd dated a gun-stockpiling survivalist and a breatharian, who believed you could survive on air and positive thinking, and been engaged to a soul shaman and a stormchaser. "All the more reason not to go," Graham had said. "You'll just be condoning her marrying this guy." Ted had nodded. "Definitely complicit. Unless you're going because you want to talk her out of it," and Graham had pounced. "That's it, isn't it? You're going out there to pull one of those dramatic 'speak now or forever hold your peace' numbers, aren't you?" She'd insisted she wasn't, but they hadn't believed her and had refused to listen when she'd tried to explain that she wouldn't have to talk Serena out of it--that Serena always came to her senses and started having second thoughts herself. That's what had happened with the stormchaser. "He thinks tornadoes are an adventure, like The Wizard of Oz or something," she'd told Francie, "but they're dangerous! And he expects me to drive straight into them with him!" All Francie'd had to do was stand there while Serena talked herself out of it and called the wedding off. But to have that happen, Francie had to be there to listen to her doubts and assure her she was doing the right thing. Serena counted on Francie to be her sounding board and her backup, to rescue her from making a terrible decision just like she'd rescued Francie so many times. "Friends are supposed to help each other, aren't they?" Francie had asked Ted and Graham. "Yeah, but there are limits," Ted had said. "What if next time she decides to marry a serial killer and you talk her out of it and he comes after you?" "She is not going to marry a serial killer." "My advice is to tell her something came up and you can't come," Graham said. "Yeah, tell her you broke your leg or something," Ted added. "I can't do that. I can't just abandon her. She needs me." "Okay," they'd said, "but don't come crying to us if this turns out to be a complete disaster." Which it very well might, she thought, looking around the waiting area. Where was Serena? She'd specifically said she'd be at the airport to drive Francie down to Roswell. "That way we'll have a chance to talk," she'd said, and Francie had taken that as a sign Serena was already having second thoughts. So where is she? Francie texted, Where R U? No answer. Maybe she thinks we were supposed to meet at baggage claim, Francie thought, shouldered her carry-on, and went down the escalator to see if Serena was there. She wasn't, but a number of people going to the UFO Festival were, and yes, the festival was in Roswell, because their T-shirts all said so, and as if that wasn't enough, they were all talking about a UFO sighting that had happened on Monday night. "Where?" a woman in a silver minidress and green body makeup asked. "West of Roswell. Just outside Hondo, near those big red-rock buttes," one of the T-shirt guys said. "I don't remember any red-rock buttes near Hondo," the green woman said. "I don't know, that's just what they said. It was on UfosAreReal​dotnet." Francie texted Serena again, checked the other luggage carousels, and then walked outside to see if she might be waiting in her car. She wasn't. Francie went back inside to the baggage carousel in case she'd missed her somehow, checked her texts, and then called Serena. "Where are you?" she said when Serena answered. "In Roswell," Serena said, sounding harried. "I'm so sorry about this. I intended to be there to meet you, but we've had all kinds of problems, and I still have to pick up your dress, and it's a complete zoo here with the festival and the town getting ready for the Fourth of July and everything, so I asked Russell's best man to pick you up. His name's Larry. He's perfect for you." I doubt that, Francie thought. Serena's taste in guys for Francie was as bad as her own choices in boyfriends. At her almost-wedding to the stormchaser, she'd tried to fix Francie up with a ghosthunter who spent his time in ghost towns with an EMF detector, looking for the ghosts of outlaws and claiming he'd collected their ectoplasm. Which was why Francie had been so desperate to bring a plus-one with her. "Larry's totally hot," Serena was saying. "He's six foot two and really interesting to talk to. He's had three close encounters and been abducted twice. He wrote a book about it-- The Survivor's Guide to Alien Abduction. "So where's he supposed to meet me?" Francie said, scanning the baggage claim for someone tall, dark, and handsome, but the only people waiting for their luggage were three teenagers in Star Trek uniforms and Spock ears. "He wasn't abducted again, was he?" "No," Serena said, "but there was a possible sighting two nights ago that he had to go check out." Oh my God, I am so glad Graham and Ted refused to come, Francie thought. I would never hear the end of it. Excerpted from The Road to Roswell: A Novel by Connie Willis All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.