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New Scientist recommends sci-fi novel Under the Eye of the Big Bird

The books, TV, games and more that New Scientist staff have enjoyed this week

By Eleanor Parsons

11 March 2026

Under the Eye of the Big Bird

‘Tender … yet haunting’: Under the Eye of the Big Bird

Most fiction looking into a future where humanity faces extinction is bleak. That can’t be said for the beguiling , written by Hiromi Kawakami and translated by Asa Yoneda. This is a more tender – yet still haunting – look at our end.

We enter a world where humanity has been split into isolated communities to try to save it. Each is overseen by mysterious Watchers, while uncanny Mothers help to raise children. At first, this collection of short stories doesn’t seem to link together, but the tales build into an entrancing whole that spans thousands of years. Along the way, we meet clones, people with three eyes, mind readers and humans who can photosynthesise.

This is a wonderful look at what it means to be human, from love and friendship to loneliness and despair. We also get glimpses of humans at their worst, whether in hints of what came before or how we can respond to those who are different from us.

Eleanor Parsons
Magazine editor, London

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