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Becky ChambersA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The Wayfarer is a heavily modified cargo ship that carries an interstitial bore capable of punching new wormhole passages, allowing ships to travel interstellar distances instantly. In form, the Wayfarer is bulky and not built to enter atmosphere. The original design of the Wayfarer is never mentioned; instead, it looks “as though whole sections had been cobbled together, perhaps originating from other vessels. A patchwork ship. The only reassuring thing about it was that it looked sturdy. This was a ship that could take (and had taken) a few knocks” (14).
The ship’s combination of haphazard construction and reliability is a representation of its crew. Just as the ship is composed of parts from earlier, unrelated ships, so too is the crew made up of members of disparate species, races, sexual orientations, and gender identities. These differences in background are not an impediment to the crew’s proper functioning as a harmonious unit; their differences are responsible for their resilience as a crew. The workaday appearance of the ship further embodies the crew. As spacers, they generally wear the same utilitarian clothing every day. They, like their ship, display no indication of importance and pass unnoticed through the Galactic Commons completing their jobs.
Just as the Wayfarer embodies the crew’s ability to work together despite their differences, the Fishbowl embodies the family dynamic between them. Formed by welding an observation dome onto the outer hull of the ship and creating an observation bubble, the Fishbowl is the Wayfarer’s mess hall and lounge. It is where the crew decompresses from their work and gets to know one another better.
The Fishbowl is primarily the domain of Dr. Chef and his kitchen. He also maintains a large garden of potted vegetables and herbs to supplement the crew’s diet. The crew, except for Ohan, sits down together in the Fishbowl for dinner every evening, so that “family dinner” anchors the crew socially and chronologically. Besides serving as the social center of the ship, the Fishbowl is also where the crew makes major decisions at large. This is significant because, as captain, Ashby could simply make these decisions on his own or in consultation with Sissix, his first officer. That these decisions are made in the Fishbowl underscores the family dynamic among the crew.
By Becky Chambers