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The Lost Star

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While on an archaeological expedition to Balthor, a young astrophysicist stumbles upon the Lumpies--gray smiling creatures with a strange secret.

150 pages, Hardcover

First published March 26, 1979

4 people are currently reading
93 people want to read

About the author

Helen Mary Hoover

19 books55 followers
http://www.orrt.org/hoover/

Over the course of her twenty-three-year career as a writer, H.M. Hoover won eight awards for her writing, including three Best Book for Young Adult designations from the American Library Association and two Parent's Choice Honor Awards. Another Heaven, Another Earth received the Ohioana Award in 1982.

H.M. Hoover lived in Burke, Virginia. Her last published work was The Whole Truth - And Other Myths: Retelling Ancient Tales, in 1996.

Hoover changed her pen name to H.M. Hoover before Children came out because there was already a children's author named Helen Hoover.

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5 stars
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37 (33%)
3 stars
21 (18%)
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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Deborah Nock.
Author 6 books5 followers
April 3, 2020
A meeting of minds

Yet another wonderful book by HM Hoover. I only read This Time of Darkness as a child and the story never left me. I didn't realise there were others! On to the next one...
Profile Image for Lisa.
Author 6 books112 followers
May 6, 2015
An old favorite from my childhood. Still makes me happy on the umpteenth reread.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
13k reviews482 followers
November 7, 2025
A little difficult to parse, especially if read in short bits. But thought-provoking, and I would have enjoyed it very much when I was a young teen. I craved stimulating stories like this. Hoover does not underestimate the curiosity and thoughtfulness of youth & feed them simple adventures.

"She wondered if that was the source of most social noise - the need to avoid thinking about what really mattered."

"I was trying to be polite, to explain -."
"No. You were trying to be forgiven for bigotry."
613 reviews1 follower
June 6, 2021
Such a wonderful, amazing story of a teen finding themselves . H M Hoover is my absolute favorite sci fi author.

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Profile Image for Rob Hopwood.
147 reviews4 followers
December 31, 2021
The Lost Star by Helen Mary Hoover

Raised by emotionally distant astronomer parents at an observatory on an alien planet, fifteen-year-old earth-born Lian crashes her shuttle a thousand miles away during a routine supply run. She is found by an archaeologist from Earth who is there overseeing the excavation of a particularly mysterious site.

Among the seemingly native species, Lian discovers an immediate connection with a group of amiable hexapods whom the archeological team treat as harmless and rather stupid animals, even giving them the name "Lumpies".

Lian's empathetic bond with the Lumpies emboldens them to reveal to her a secret that they have been hiding for generations; a secret that will bring out the best and worst qualities of those in the archeological team when they are told about it.

When her mother finally finds the time to make the trip out to collect her, Lian for the first time finds the courage to defy the wishes of her parents and decides to stay on at the dig.

The author sets up a parallel between Lian's situation at the observatory (where she is not understood and given only the option of making astrophysics her future career) and the Lumpies predicament which necessitates concealing their intelligence in order to protect themselves and what belongs to them.

This time away from the observatory affords Lian opportunity to reconsider her priorities and plans for the future, which have hitherto been decided for her by others. In this way, Lian's experience has the essence of a coming-of-age story and a journey of self-discovery.

This is the second of Hoover's books I have read, and I found it very imaginative and absorbing. Having said that, I think that I enjoyed This Time of Darkness more, probably because it dealt with more adult themes and was more closely plotted. But I would certainly recommend The Lost Star for middle-grade readers and those who have an interest in science fiction literature aimed at children and young adults.

Here are some quotes from the book:

...the supernova, the fiery death of a distant sun. She was going to tell them that, then decided not to. People did not always appreciate raw facts—especially when they were engaged in making wishes.

She wondered if that was the source of most social noise—the need to avoid thinking about what really mattered.

"They'll overlook my secretiveness. But yours would be seen as an attempt to gain personal glory." "I see you are familiar with research personalities," Dr. Farr said. "Behind each dispassionate scientific mask lurks an egomaniac."

Was it because they suggested a human, with their big sad eyes, clown smile, and dumpy figure, that humans laughed at them? And if the humans laughed, then did that give other sentient species the freedom to express chauvinistic disdain for lumpies similar to the contempt they felt for humans but dared not express?

There was a definite comfort in the purity of astrophysics, she thought. There were no emotional elements. She suddenly understood more her parents' passion for their work. It shut out things like this ... it shut out the problems of normal life. And some of the joy.

Did you ever quit saying, 'Let's go home now'? Or did you just whisper it inside yourself, too, when you finally figured out the truth and knew there was no hope?

Afterward, when she could think again about that morning, about that child's room, she knew it had all in some way shifted time for her and ended her own childhood.

By the time she could return to Earth a generation of Earth time would have passed. What she longed for would be gone. Things might remain, a house and garden, artifacts, but all who lived within that human past lived now only in her mind.
Like the lumpies, she had to start from now, to keep and to use what was good from the past, and forget about the rest.

"I remember once my mother was holding my hand before I went back to sleep after a bad dream, and to comfort me she said. There in your small finger is an iron atom born in the death of a star. It passed through the gaseous clouds of space, whirled into and out of Earth's sun to Earth, passed through mountains and prehistoric seas, dinosaurs, a fish and a fisherman, the north wind, a rabbit, a river and steel and rust. It is immortal. We are all immortal atoms.'"


191 reviews14 followers
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February 14, 2022
As I was reading this, I was struck by the changes in tone in children's science fiction since 1979. And though the protagonist is 16, this *feels* like what would now be a middle-grade novel. There is no romance. No sex. The vibe is that of a book meant for elementary school aged readers, and that was certainly the age I first read HM Hoover (though not this book - this was my first pass through this one.)

In 2022, a lot of MG science fiction feels... angry. Adults are useless or oppressive. Society has failed. It's very despairing. This book is hopeful. While some people are indeed miserable, the culture as a whole is presented as basically good and a place the POV character would reasonably want to live in when she grows up. Different sentient species work together with awareness of and sensitivity to cultural differences. But it isn't naive. The narrator has a pretty clear view of the selfishness and egotism of academics, but their human failings are presented in more nuanced ways than the good/bad moral dichotomy I see in a lot of more recent books. I wonder if some of that comes from having a teenage narrator be the entry into a book instead of a child of 11 or 12.

The pacing is slower than more recent books, which can sometimes be frenetic. The stakes feel lower. The tone is more one of quiet wonder than a thriller.

All in all, an excellent, enjoyable read that is definitely out of date stylistically and tonally, and there's a point where the discovered civilization is classified as a colony and its inhabitants as colonials that may grate on some modern readers, but the themes (growing up, treating others with respect, not making assumptions about people based on appearance) don't feel dated at all.
Profile Image for Emily.
147 reviews
January 12, 2026
I liked it; I've read the author before and I appreciate her work.
Profile Image for Meghann Yoder.
3 reviews8 followers
February 13, 2019
Read in jail. Love it. Got information.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Martha.
560 reviews
February 29, 2008
A young woman suddenly stranded on a backwater world near an extra-terrestrial archaeological digwith a team of scientists must rethink her priorities and her plans for the future when a mysterious group of alien creatures, the enigmatic animals called "Lumpies", try to communicate with her. With her parents delaying her rescue for the moment, she delves into the complexities surrounding the dig team and the lumpies.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 4 books2,411 followers
December 22, 2009
Clever, innocent, and full of wonder. Who has ever dreamed of discovering an alien civilization?
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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