Contributor’s Note from the Quiet Side of Earth
NASA Contributor’s Note from the Quiet Side of Earth I mailed some poems to the Moon— not with stamps, but with engineers, with payload mass budgets and a tolerance for wonder. They called it the Lunar Codex: a library miniaturized into stubborn endurance— nickel plates, etched like patient fossils, or memory so small it requires a microscope and a belief that eyes will follow later. We argue about archives down here—formats, failures, bit rot nibbling at the edges of our certainty— but up there the vacuum is a careful librarian. No oxygen to gossip with the pages, no rain to revise the margins. Just sunlight, blunt and honest, and a regolith that keeps secrets without asking what they mean. I imagine my lines tucked among others— artists, scientists, the occasional heretic of beauty— compressed into geometry, a choir rehearsing in silence. It’s a peculiar kind of immortality: not the loud forever of statues, but the quiet maybe of a backup placed where tides can’t reach. Yes, the Moon...

