Monday, 6 July 2026

Moss'd in Space by Rebecca Thorne


Her starship gave her freedom.
But could it also become a friend?

Torian thought she was getting a bargain: a century-old alien starship, abandoned and covered in moss. It was her ticket away from a smuggling past and her overbearing ex . . . ah, ex-captain, Amelia. But the moss has a mind of its own.

As the ship’s ‘organic computer,’ Moss is lonely, snarky and harbouring serious abandonment issues. And when Torian journeys onward, she encounters the immortal alien who built the craft, then just left it behind – with Moss inside. The ship he’s now accusing Torian of stealing. Charting a new course across the galaxy, Torian finds an unexpected ally in Amelia, who might help her find the safe haven she craves. Torian can pilot a starship. But can she uncover ancient secrets and connect with a computer that just wants to belong?


A moss-covered alien starship. A pilot trying to outrun her past. An organic computer with abandonment issues. Moss'd in Space is cosy science fiction that proves saving the galaxy isn't nearly as interesting as learning to trust the people beside you.


📚 Pre-Reading Thoughts

When someone describes a book as having Firefly vibes, it's immediately going onto my reading list.

Cosy science fiction is still a surprisingly small corner of the genre, and I'm always interested in stories that focus less on galaxy-ending threats and more on the people trying to build lives among the stars.


📖 Post-Reading

As I thought...

  • This is a wonderfully character-driven story. There isn't a constant stream of life-or-death action, but that's entirely the point. The real journey is watching damaged people gradually help each other heal.
  • Torian makes an engaging protagonist. She's competent without having everything figured out, and her relationships—particularly with Amelia and Moss—drive the emotional heart of the novel.
  • The humour lands beautifully. Moss, in particular, is a delight: snarky, lonely, occasionally dramatic, and surprisingly easy to sympathise with despite technically being a spaceship.

It surprised me by...

  • How thoughtful the science fiction ideas are. The worldbuilding is full of little concepts that feel fresh while remaining grounded enough to be believable. One particular medical detail especially reminded me of Earth 2, exploring the long-term consequences of living in carefully controlled artificial environments.
  • Just how much warmth there is beneath the comedy. Every major character is carrying some kind of hurt, and rather than "fixing" each other overnight, they slowly learn how to become the support each of them has been missing.
  • The epilogue. Without spoiling anything: if you like your books neatly wrapped up, you may wish to stop one page early. If, however, you enjoy immediately needing the sequel... well, consider yourself warned.

I know exactly which camp I fall into, because I'll definitely be picking up the next book.


🎧 Music Pairing

🎵 Featured Song:
Learn to Fly

🎶 Vibe Album:
The Race for Space

🎧 Artist Recommendation:
ELO — optimistic, spacey, and just quirky enough to suit a sentient moss-covered spaceship.


🌈 Vibe Check

  • Colour Palette: moss green, nebula blue, brushed copper, warm amber
  • Soundtrack: gentle engine hums, distant stars, cheerful bickering over the comms
  • Season: perpetual spring somewhere among the stars
  • Mood: hopeful, funny, quietly healing
  • Scent: warm circuitry, damp moss, machine oil, fresh tea

🃏 Tarot Pull

Three of Pentacles

At its heart, this is a story about people with very different strengths learning to work together. Nobody succeeds alone, and every member of the crew—including one particularly opinionated organic computer—has something valuable to contribute. The Three of Pentacles celebrates collaboration, trust, and building something stronger together.



👀 For fans of

  • Firefly
  • Farscape
  • cosy science fiction where the found family matters just as much as the spaceship

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