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Cover of Voyagers

Voyagers

Meg Charlton (2026-06-16)

Subgenre
Age groupAdult 18+
Content ratingPG-13
Pages292 (Standard (250-400))
Setting
CSM age16

Content levels

ViolenceNone
Sexual contentNone
LanguageMild

Heroine archetypes

Coming-of-Age Heroine

Protagonist archetypes

Duo / PartnersAmnesiac

Synopsis

"In the tradition of Gabrielle Zevin’s Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, Meg Charlton’s Voyagers is a finely written and propulsive novel about the enduring power of friendship. It takes on big issues: the reliability of memory, the price of childhood fame, the ways adults use children for their own purposes. It’s also a book about aliens, geared for terrestrials. Which is to say it’s complex and human, anchored by a beating heart.”—Joshua Henkin When the Signal—a mysterious transmission pulsing from the edge of the solar system— arrives, the world changes overnight. Planes are grounded, satellites fail, and speculation abounds. With many believing this could be first contact with extraterrestrial life, humanity holds its breath. But for Alex, a thirtysomething lawyer who’s spent years distancing himself from the unexplainable, the Signal feels deeply personal—the opening of an old wound. Decades ago, Alex and a girl named Ana both vanished for thirty-six hours while on vacation near Palm Springs. When they returned, dazed but unharmed, the six-year-olds’ account of their experience had all the hallmarks of an alien abduction. The media frenzy that followed made them famous, and the long months of child stardom, of talk shows and sitcom cameos, forged a seemingly unbreakable bond between them—until the mystery behind their disappearance began to tear them apart. Now, with the world on edge and the Signal growing stronger, Alex is drawn back to the one person who might have answers. Ana—now a professional advocate for experiencers of extraterrestrial contact—is leading a retreat near Palm Springs, a stone’s throw from the site of their childhood disappearance. As the former best friends tentatively reunite, what starts as a quest to confront the reality of their original experience becomes a larger reckoning with friendship, faith, family, and truth itself—what it means to see the stories we tell ourselves for what they really are. With the imaginative scope and propulsive storytelling of Station Eleven and The Ministry of Time, Voyagers is a thrillingly original and brilliantly ambitious literary debut about friendship at the end of the world.

Tags

Literary FictionCharacter-DrivenMysteryPsychological Drama

Is Voyagers appropriate for my child?

Suitable for most readers 16 and up.

Literary sci-fi exploring childhood trauma, alien abduction claims, and the unreliability of memory. Contains mature themes about media exploitation of children and psychological manipulation, but no graphic content.

What to know going in

This book has no graphic violence, no sexual content, and mild language. Content notes include childhood fame, manipulation, and trauma (see the full list above).

Who'll love this

A thought-provoking story about two childhood friends reuniting decades after a mysterious disappearance that made them famous.