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Robert A. Heinlein

Robert Anson Heinlein (/ˈhnln/;[2][3][4] July 7, 1907 – May 8, 1988) was an American science fiction author, aeronautical engineer, and naval officer. Sometimes called the "dean of science fiction writers",[5] he was among the first to emphasize scientific accuracy in his fiction, and was thus a pioneer of the subgenre of hard science fiction. His published works, both fiction and non-fiction, express admiration for competence and emphasize the value of critical thinking.[6] His plots often posed provocative situations which challenged conventional social mores.[7] His work continues to have an influence on the science-fiction genre, and on modern culture more generally.

Robert A. Heinlein
Heinlein in 1976
BornRobert Anson Heinlein
(1907-07-07)July 7, 1907
Butler, Missouri, U.S.
DiedMay 8, 1988(1988-05-08) (aged 80)
Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, U.S.
Pen nameAnson MacDonald
Lyle Monroe
John Riverside
Caleb Saunders
Simon York
Occupation
  • Author
  • aeronautical engineer
  • lieutenant USN[1]
Alma mater
Period1939–1988
GenreScience fiction, fantasy
Notable works
Spouse
Elinor Curry
(m. 1929; div. 1930)
Leslyn MacDonald
(m. 1932; div. 1947)
(m. 1948)
Signature

Heinlein became one of the first American science-fiction writers to break into mainstream magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post in the late 1940s. He was one of the best-selling science-fiction novelists for many decades, and he, Isaac Asimov, and Arthur C. Clarke are often considered the "Big Three" of English-language science fiction authors.[8][9][10] Notable Heinlein works include Stranger in a Strange Land,[11] Starship Troopers (which helped mold the space marine and mecha archetypes) and The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress.[12] His work sometimes had controversial aspects, such as plural marriage in The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, militarism in Starship Troopers and technologically competent women characters that were formidable,[13] yet often stereotypically feminine—such as Friday.

A writer also of many science-fiction short stories, Heinlein was one of a group of writers who came to prominence under the editorship (1937–1971) of John W. Campbell at Astounding Science Fiction magazine, though Heinlein denied that Campbell influenced his writing to any great degree.

Heinlein used his science fiction as a way to explore provocative social and political ideas and to speculate how progress in science and engineering might shape the future of politics, race, religion, and sex.[12] Within the framework of his science-fiction stories, Heinlein repeatedly addressed certain social themes: the importance of individual liberty and self-reliance, the nature of sexual relationships, the obligation individuals owe to their societies, the influence of organized religion on culture and government, and the tendency of society to repress nonconformist thought. He also speculated on the influence of space travel on human cultural practices.

Heinlein was named the first Science Fiction Writers Grand Master in 1974.[14] Four of his novels won Hugo Awards. In addition, fifty years after publication, seven of his works were awarded "Retro Hugos"—awards given retrospectively for works that were published before the Hugo Awards came into existence.[15] In his fiction, Heinlein coined terms that have become part of the English language, including grok, waldo and speculative fiction, as well as popularizing existing terms like "TANSTAAFL", "pay it forward", and "space marine". He also anticipated mechanical computer-aided design with "Drafting Dan" and described a modern version of a waterbed in his novel Beyond This Horizon.[16]

Several of Heinlein's works have been adapted for film and television.

Life

 
Midshipman Heinlein, from the 1929 U.S. Naval Academy yearbook

Birth, childhood, and early education

Heinlein, born on July 7, 1907, to Rex Ivar Heinlein (an accountant) and Bam Lyle Heinlein, in Butler, Missouri, was the third of seven children. He was a sixth-generation German-American; a family tradition had it that Heinleins fought in every American war, starting with the War of Independence.[17]

He spent his childhood in Kansas City, Missouri.[18] The outlook and values of this time and place (in his own words, "The Bible Belt") had an influence on his fiction, especially in his later works, as he drew heavily upon his childhood in establishing the setting and cultural atmosphere in works like Time Enough for Love and To Sail Beyond the Sunset. The 1910 appearance of Halley's Comet inspired the young child's life-long interest in astronomy.[19]

The family could not afford to send Heinlein to college, so he sought an appointment to a military academy.[20] When Heinlein graduated from Central High School in Kansas City in 1924, he was initially prevented from attending the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis because his older brother Rex was a student there, and regulations discouraged multiple family members from attending the academy simultaneously.[citation needed] He instead matriculated at Kansas City Community College and began vigorously petitioning Missouri Senator James A. Reed for an appointment to the Naval Academy. In part due to the influence of the Pendergast machine, the Naval Academy admitted him in June 1925;[12] Reed later told Heinlein that he had received 100 letters of recommendation for nomination to the Naval Academy, 50 for other candidates and 50 for Heinlein.[20]

Navy

Heinlein's experience in the U.S. Navy exerted a strong influence on his character and writing. In 1929, he graduated from the Naval Academy with the equivalent of a bachelor of arts in engineering (the Academy did not at the time confer degrees). He ranked fifth in his class academically but with a class standing of 20th of 243 due to disciplinary demerits. The U.S. Navy commissioned him as an ensign shortly after his graduation. He advanced to lieutenant junior grade in 1931 while serving aboard the new aircraft carrier USS Lexington, where he worked in radio communications—a technology then still in its earlier stages. The captain of this carrier, Ernest J. King, later served as the Chief of Naval Operations and Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Fleet during World War II. Military historians frequently[quantify] interviewed Heinlein during his later years and asked him about Captain King and his service as the commander of the U.S. Navy's first modern aircraft carrier. Heinlein also served as gunnery officer aboard the destroyer USS Roper in 1933 and 1934, reaching the rank of lieutenant.[21] His brother, Lawrence Heinlein, served in the U.S. Army, the U.S. Air Force, and the Missouri National Guard, reaching the rank of major general in the National Guard.[22]

Marriages

In 1929, Heinlein married Elinor Curry of Kansas City.[23] However, their marriage lasted only about a year.[3] His second marriage in 1932 to Leslyn MacDonald (1904–1981) lasted for 15 years. MacDonald was, according to the testimony of Heinlein's Navy friend, Rear Admiral Cal Laning, "astonishingly intelligent, widely read, and extremely liberal, though a registered Republican",[24] while Isaac Asimov later recalled that Heinlein was, at the time, "a flaming liberal".[25] (See section: Politics of Robert Heinlein.)

 
Virginia and Robert Heinlein in a 1952 Popular Mechanics article, titled "A House to Make Life Easy". The Heinleins, both engineers, designed the house for themselves with many innovative features.

At the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard Heinlein met and befriended a chemical engineer named Virginia "Ginny" Gerstenfeld. After the war, her engagement having fallen through, she attended UCLA for doctoral studies in chemistry, and while there reconnected with Heinlein. As his second wife's alcoholism gradually spun out of control,[26] Heinlein moved out and the couple filed for divorce. Heinlein's friendship with Virginia turned into a relationship and on October 21, 1948—shortly after the decree nisi came through—they married in the town of Raton, New Mexico, shortly after setting up housekeeping in the Broadmoor district of Colorado Springs in a house that Heinlein and his wife (both engineers) designed. As the area was newly developed, they were allowed to choose their own house number, 1776 Mesa Avenue.[27] The design of the house was featured in Popular Mechanics.[28] They remained married until Heinlein's death. In 1965, after various chronic health problems of Virginia's were traced back to altitude sickness, they moved to Santa Cruz, California, which is at sea level. Robert and Virginia designed and built a new residence, circular in shape, in the adjacent village of Bonny Doon.[29][30]

 
Robert and Virginia Heinlein in Tahiti, 1980

Ginny undoubtedly served as a model for many of his intelligent, fiercely independent female characters.[31][32] She was a chemist and rocket test engineer, and held a higher rank in the Navy than Heinlein himself. She was also an accomplished college athlete, earning four letters.[1] In 1953–1954, the Heinleins voyaged around the world (mostly via ocean liners and cargo liners, as Ginny detested flying), which Heinlein described in Tramp Royale, and which also provided background material for science fiction novels set aboard spaceships on long voyages, such as Podkayne of Mars, Friday and Job: A Comedy of Justice, the latter initially being set on a cruise much as detailed in Tramp Royale. Ginny acted as the first reader of his manuscripts. Isaac Asimov believed that Heinlein made a swing to the right politically at the same time he married Ginny.

California

In 1934, Heinlein was discharged from the Navy, owing to pulmonary tuberculosis. During a lengthy hospitalization, and inspired by his own experience while bed-ridden, he developed a design for a waterbed.[33]

After his discharge, Heinlein attended a few weeks of graduate classes in mathematics and physics at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), but he soon quit, either because of his ill-health or because of a desire to enter politics.[34]

Heinlein supported himself at several occupations, including real estate sales and silver mining, but for some years found money in short supply. Heinlein was active in Upton Sinclair's socialist End Poverty in California movement (EPIC) in the early 1930s. He was deputy publisher of the EPIC News, which Heinlein noted "recalled a mayor, kicked out a district attorney, replaced the governor with one of our choice."[35] When Sinclair gained the Democratic nomination for Governor of California in 1934, Heinlein worked actively in the campaign. Heinlein himself ran for the California State Assembly in 1938, but was unsuccessful. Heinlein was running as a left-wing Democrat in a conservative district, and he never made it past the Democratic primary.[36]

Author

 

While not destitute after the campaign—he had a small disability pension from the Navy—Heinlein turned to writing to pay off his mortgage. His first published story, "Life-Line", was printed in the August 1939 issue of Astounding Science Fiction.[37] Originally written for a contest, he sold it to Astounding for significantly more than the contest's first-prize payoff. Another Future History story, "Misfit", followed in November.[37] Some saw Heinlein's talent and stardom from his first story,[38] and he was quickly acknowledged as a leader of the new movement toward "social" science fiction. In California he hosted the Mañana Literary Society, a 1940–41 series of informal gatherings of new authors.[39] He was the guest of honor at Denvention, the 1941 Worldcon, held in Denver. During World War II, Heinlein was employed by the Navy as a civilian aeronautical engineer at the Navy Aircraft Materials Center at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in Pennsylvania.[40] Heinlein recruited Isaac Asimov and L. Sprague de Camp to also work there.[33] While at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyards, Asimov, Heinlein, and de Camp brainstormed unconventional approaches to kamikaze attacks, such as using sound to detect approaching planes.[41]

As the war wound down in 1945, Heinlein began to re-evaluate his career. The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, along with the outbreak of the Cold War, galvanized him to write nonfiction on political topics. In addition, he wanted to break into better-paying markets. He published four influential short stories for The Saturday Evening Post magazine, leading off, in February 1947, with "The Green Hills of Earth". That made him the first science fiction writer to break out of the "pulp ghetto". In 1950, the movie Destination Moon—the documentary-like film for which he had written the story and scenario, co-written the script, and invented many of the effects—won an Academy Award for special effects. Also, he embarked on a series of juvenile novels for the Charles Scribner's Sons publishing company that went from 1947 through 1959, at the rate of one book each autumn, in time for Christmas presents to teenagers. He also wrote for Boys' Life in 1952.

Heinlein had used topical materials throughout his juvenile series beginning in 1947, but in 1958 he interrupted work on The Heretic (the working title of Stranger in a Strange Land) to write and publish a book exploring ideas of civic virtue, initially serialized as Starship Soldiers. In 1959, his novel (now entitled Starship Troopers) was considered by the editors and owners of Scribner's to be too controversial for one of its prestige lines, and it was rejected.[42] Heinlein found another publisher (Putnam), feeling himself released from the constraints of writing novels for children. He had told an interviewer that he did not want to do stories that merely added to categories defined by other works. Rather he wanted to do his own work, stating that: "I want to do my own stuff, my own way".[43] He would go on to write a series of challenging books that redrew the boundaries of science fiction, including Stranger in a Strange Land (1961) and The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (1966).

Later life and death

Beginning in 1970, Heinlein had a series of health crises, broken by strenuous periods of activity in his hobby of stonemasonry: in a private correspondence, he referred to that as his "usual and favorite occupation between books".[44] The decade began with a life-threatening attack of peritonitis, recovery from which required more than two years, and treatment of which required multiple transfusions of Heinlein's rare blood type, A2 negative.[citation needed] As soon as he was well enough to write again, he began work on Time Enough for Love (1973), which introduced many of the themes found in his later fiction.

In the mid-1970s, Heinlein wrote two articles for the Britannica Compton Yearbook.[45] He and Ginny crisscrossed the country helping to reorganize blood donation in the United States in an effort to assist the system which had saved his life.[citation needed] At science fiction conventions to receive his autograph, fans would be asked to co-sign with Heinlein a beautifully embellished pledge form he supplied stating that the recipient agrees that they will donate blood. He was the guest of honor at the Worldcon in 1976 for the third time at MidAmeriCon in Kansas City, Missouri. At that Worldcon, Heinlein hosted a blood drive and donors' reception to thank all those who had helped save lives.

Beginning in 1977, and including an episode while vacationing in Tahiti in early 1978, he had episodes of reversible neurologic dysfunction due to transient ischemic attacks.[46] Over the next few months, he became more and more exhausted, and his health again began to decline. The problem was determined to be a blocked carotid artery, and he had one of the earliest known carotid bypass operations to correct it. Heinlein and Virginia had been smokers,[47] and smoking appears often in his fiction, as do fictitious strikable self-lighting cigarettes.[48]

In 1980, Robert Heinlein was a member of the Citizens Advisory Council on National Space Policy, chaired by Jerry Pournelle, which met at the home of SF writer Larry Niven to write space policy papers for the incoming Reagan administration. Members included such aerospace industry leaders as former astronaut Buzz Aldrin, General Daniel O. Graham, aerospace engineer Max Hunter and North American Rockwell VP for Space Shuttle development George Merrick. Policy recommendations from the Council included ballistic missile defense concepts which were later transformed into what was called the Strategic Defense Initiative. Heinlein assisted with Council contribution to the Reagan SDI spring 1983 speech.

Asked to appear before a Joint Committee of the United States Congress that year, he testified on his belief that spin-offs from space technology were benefiting the infirm and the elderly. Heinlein's surgical treatment re-energized him, and he wrote five novels from 1980 until he died in his sleep from emphysema and heart failure on May 8, 1988.

At that time, he had been putting together the early notes for another World as Myth novel. Several of his other works have been published posthumously. Based on an outline and notes created by Heinlein in 1955, Spider Robinson wrote the novel Variable Star.[49] Heinlein's posthumously published nonfiction includes a selection of correspondence and notes edited into a somewhat autobiographical examination of his career, published in 1989 under the title Grumbles from the Grave by his wife, Virginia; his book on practical politics written in 1946 published as Take Back Your Government; and a travelogue of their first around-the-world tour in 1954, Tramp Royale. The novels Podkayne of Mars and Red Planet, which were edited against his wishes in their original release, have been reissued in restored editions. Stranger In a Strange Land was originally published in a shorter form, but both the long and short versions are now simultaneously available in print.

Heinlein's archive is housed by the Special Collections department of McHenry Library at the University of California at Santa Cruz. The collection includes manuscript drafts, correspondence, photographs and artifacts. A substantial portion of the archive has been digitized and it is available online through the Robert A. and Virginia Heinlein Archives.[50]

Written works

Heinlein published 32 novels, 59 short stories, and 16 collections during his life. Nine films, two television series, several episodes of a radio series, and a board game have been derived more or less directly from his work. He wrote a screenplay for one of the films. Heinlein edited an anthology of other writers' SF short stories.

Three nonfiction books and two poems have been published posthumously. For Us, the Living: A Comedy of Customs was published posthumously in 2003;[51] Variable Star, written by Spider Robinson based on an extensive outline by Heinlein, was published in September 2006. Four collections have been published posthumously.[37]

Series

Over the course of his career, Heinlein wrote three somewhat overlapping series:

Early work, 1939–1958

Heinlein began his career as a writer of stories for Astounding Science Fiction magazine, which was edited by John Campbell. The science fiction writer Frederik Pohl has described Heinlein as "that greatest of Campbell-era sf writers".[52] Isaac Asimov said that, from the time of his first story, the science fiction world accepted that Heinlein was the best science fiction writer in existence, adding that he would hold this title through his lifetime.[53]

Alexei and Cory Panshin noted that Heinlein's impact was immediately felt. In 1940, the year after selling 'Life-Line' to Campbell, he wrote three short novels, four novelettes, and seven short stories. They went on to say that "No one ever dominated the science fiction field as Bob did in the first few years of his career."[54] Alexei expresses awe in Heinlein's ability to show readers a world so drastically different from the one we live in now, yet have so many similarities. He says that "We find ourselves not only in a world other than our own, but identifying with a living, breathing individual who is operating within its context, and thinking and acting according to its terms."[55]

 
Heinlein's 1942 novel Beyond This Horizon was reprinted in Two Complete Science-Adventure Books in 1952, appearing under the "Anson McDonald" byline even though the book edition had been published under Heinlein's own name four years earlier.
 
The opening installment of The Puppet Masters took the cover of the September 1951 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction.

The first novel that Heinlein wrote, For Us, the Living: A Comedy of Customs (1939), did not see print during his lifetime, but Robert James tracked down the manuscript and it was published in 2003. Though some regard it as a failure as a novel,[18] considering it little more than a disguised lecture on Heinlein's social theories, some readers took a very different view. In a review of it, John Clute wrote:

I'm not about to suggest that if Heinlein had been able to publish [such works] openly in the pages of Astounding in 1939, SF would have gotten the future right; I would suggest, however, that if Heinlein, and his colleagues, had been able to publish adult SF in Astounding and its fellow journals, then SF might not have done such a grotesquely poor job of prefiguring something of the flavor of actually living here at the onset of 2004.[56]

For Us, the Living was intriguing as a window into the development of Heinlein's radical ideas about man as a social animal, including his interest in free love. The root of many themes found in his later stories can be found in this book. It also contained a large amount of material that could be considered background for his other novels. This included a detailed description of the protagonist's treatment to avoid being banished to Coventry (a lawless land in the Heinlein mythos where unrepentant law-breakers are exiled).[57]

 
Heinlein as depicted in Amazing Stories in 1953

It appears that Heinlein at least attempted to live in a manner consistent with these ideals, even in the 1930s, and had an open relationship in his marriage to his second wife, Leslyn. He was also a nudist;[3] nudism and body taboos are frequently discussed in his work. At the height of the Cold War, he built a bomb shelter under his house, like the one featured in Farnham's Freehold.[3]

After For Us, the Living, Heinlein began selling (to magazines) first short stories, then novels, set in a Future History, complete with a time line of significant political, cultural, and technological changes. A chart of the future history was published in the May 1941 issue of Astounding. Over time, Heinlein wrote many novels and short stories that deviated freely from the Future History on some points, while maintaining consistency in some other areas. The Future History was eventually overtaken by actual events. These discrepancies were explained, after a fashion, in his later World as Myth stories.

Heinlein's first novel published as a book, Rocket Ship Galileo, was initially rejected because going to the moon was considered too far-fetched, but he soon found a publisher, Scribner's, that began publishing a Heinlein juvenile once a year for the Christmas season.[58] Eight of these books were illustrated by Clifford Geary in a distinctive white-on-black scratchboard style.[59] Some representative novels of this type are Have Space Suit—Will Travel, Farmer in the Sky, and Starman Jones. Many of these were first published in serial form under other titles, e.g., Farmer in the Sky was published as Satellite Scout in the Boy Scout magazine Boys' Life. There has been speculation that Heinlein's intense obsession with his privacy was due at least in part to the apparent contradiction between his unconventional private life[clarification needed] and his career as an author of books for children. However, For Us, the Living explicitly discusses the political importance Heinlein attached to privacy as a matter of principle.[60]

The novels that Heinlein wrote for a young audience are commonly called "the Heinlein juveniles", and they feature a mixture of adolescent and adult themes. Many of the issues that he takes on in these books have to do with the kinds of problems that adolescents experience. His protagonists are usually intelligent teenagers who have to make their way in the adult society they see around them. On the surface, they are simple tales of adventure, achievement, and dealing with stupid teachers and jealous peers. Heinlein was a vocal proponent of the notion that juvenile readers were far more sophisticated and able to handle more complex or difficult themes than most people realized. His juvenile stories often had a maturity to them that made them readable for adults. Red Planet, for example, portrays some subversive themes, including a revolution in which young students are involved; his editor demanded substantial changes in this book's discussion of topics such as the use of weapons by children and the misidentified sex of the Martian character. Heinlein was always aware of the editorial limitations put in place by the editors of his novels and stories, and while he observed those restrictions on the surface, was often successful in introducing ideas not often seen in other authors' juvenile SF.

In 1957, James Blish wrote that one reason for Heinlein's success "has been the high grade of machinery which goes, today as always, into his story-telling. Heinlein seems to have known from the beginning, as if instinctively, technical lessons about fiction which other writers must learn the hard way (or often enough, never learn). He does not always operate the machinery to the best advantage, but he always seems to be aware of it."[61]

The 1972 collection Myths and Modern Man noted

It is strange how, among all the justified praise heaped upon Heinlein, what should have counted as one of the most brilliant successes of his entire career is very much overlooked. I talk, of course, about the 1940 story "Solution Unsatisfactory". At the time when the Second World War just got seriously going, the United States and Soviet Union had not yet become directly involved and the world's attention was riveted on the unfolding Battle of Britain, Heinlein was four or five steps ahead of everybody. More than a year before Roosevelt authorized the Manhattan Project, Heinlein correctly foresaw that: a) The President of the US would initiate a secret project to develop nuclear weapons and employ scientist refugees from Nazi Europe; b) By 1945, the US would have a weapon able to destroy an entire city in one blow from a single airplane—and would use that weapon to end to war; c) That with the US having thus won the war, the world would become aware of the realities of a nuclear arms race—without using the term, Heinlein predicted and described in detail the doctrine of Mutual Assured Destruction; and d) Concretely, the main issue on the agenda in the post-1945 years would be whether the Soviet Union would obtain nuclear arms, and if it did—would the Soviets try to launch a surprise nuclear attack on the United States. For having predicted all that in 1940—even to accurately predicting the remorse and guilt feeling of the scientists involved—Heinlein deserves much plaudits. In my view, this should have counted for than the Future History—which is entertaining but widely off the mark as, well, future history.[62]

1959–1960

Heinlein decisively ended his juvenile novels with Starship Troopers (1959), a controversial work and his personal riposte to leftists calling for President Dwight D. Eisenhower to stop nuclear testing in 1958. "The 'Patrick Henry' ad shocked 'em", he wrote many years later. "Starship Troopers outraged 'em."[63] Starship Troopers is a coming-of-age story about duty, citizenship, and the role of the military in society.[64] The book portrays a society in which suffrage is earned by demonstrated willingness to place society's interests before one's own, at least for a short time and often under onerous circumstances, in government service; in the case of the protagonist, this was military service.

Later, in Expanded Universe, Heinlein said that it was his intention in the novel that service could include positions outside strictly military functions such as teachers, police officers, and other government positions. This is presented in the novel as an outgrowth of the failure of unearned suffrage government and as a very successful arrangement. In addition, the franchise was only awarded after leaving the assigned service; thus those serving their terms—in the military, or any other service—were excluded from exercising any franchise. Career military were completely disenfranchised until retirement.

The name Starship Troopers was licensed for an unrelated B movie script called Bug Hunt at Outpost Nine, which was then retitled to benefit from the book's credibility.[65] The resulting film, entitled Starship Troopers (1997), which was written by Ed Neumeier and directed by Paul Verhoeven, had little relationship to the book beyond the inclusion of character names, the depiction of space marines, and the concept of suffrage earned by military service. Fans of Heinlein were critical of the movie, which they considered a betrayal of Heinlein's philosophy, presenting the society in which the story takes place as fascist.[66] Likewise, the powered armor technology that is not only central to the book but became a standard subgenre of science fiction thereafter, is completely absent in the movie, where the characters use World War II-technology weapons and wear light combat gear little more advanced than that.[67] Verhoeven commented that he had tried to read the book after he had bought the rights to it, in order to add it to his existing movie. However he read only the first two chapters, finding it too boring to continue. He thought it was a bad book and asked Ed Neumeier to tell him the story because he could not read it.[68]

Middle period work, 1961–1973

 
Heinlein's novel Podkayne of Mars was serialized in If, with a cover by Virgil Finlay.

From about 1961 (Stranger in a Strange Land) to 1973 (Time Enough for Love), Heinlein explored some of his most important themes, such as individualism, libertarianism, and free expression of physical and emotional love. Three novels from this period, Stranger in a Strange Land, The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, and Time Enough for Love, won the Libertarian Futurist Society's Prometheus Hall of Fame Award, designed to honor classic libertarian fiction.[69] Jeff Riggenbach described The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress as "unquestionably one of the three or four most influential libertarian novels of the last century".[70]

Heinlein did not publish Stranger in a Strange Land until some time after it was written, and the themes of free love and radical individualism are prominently featured in his long-unpublished first novel, For Us, the Living: A Comedy of Customs.

The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress tells of a war of independence waged by the Lunar penal colonies, with significant comments from a major character, Professor La Paz, regarding the threat posed by government to individual freedom.

Although Heinlein had previously written a few short stories in the fantasy genre, during this period he wrote his first fantasy novel, Glory Road. In Stranger in a Strange Land and I Will Fear No Evil, he began to mix hard science with fantasy, mysticism, and satire of organized religion. Critics William H. Patterson, Jr., and Andrew Thornton believe that this is simply an expression of Heinlein's longstanding philosophical opposition to positivism.[71][verification needed] Heinlein stated that he was influenced by James Branch Cabell in taking this new literary direction. The penultimate novel of this period, I Will Fear No Evil, is according to critic James Gifford "almost universally regarded as a literary failure"[72] and he attributes its shortcomings to Heinlein's near-death from peritonitis.

Later work, 1980–1987

After a seven-year hiatus brought on by poor health, Heinlein produced five new novels in the period from 1980 (The Number of the Beast) to 1987 (To Sail Beyond the Sunset). These books have a thread of common characters and time and place. They most explicitly communicated Heinlein's philosophies and beliefs, and many long, didactic passages of dialog and exposition deal with government, sex, and religion. These novels are controversial among his readers and one critic, David Langford, has written about them very negatively.[73] Heinlein's four Hugo awards were all for books written before this period.

Most of the novels from this period are recognized by critics as forming an offshoot from the Future History series and are referred to by the term World as Myth.[74]

The tendency toward authorial self-reference begun in Stranger in a Strange Land and Time Enough for Love becomes even more evident in novels such as The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, whose first-person protagonist is a disabled military veteran who becomes a writer, and finds love with a female character.[75]

The 1982 novel Friday, a more conventional adventure story (borrowing a character and backstory from the earlier short story Gulf, also containing suggestions of connection to The Puppet Masters) continued a Heinlein theme of expecting what he saw as the continued disintegration of Earth's society, to the point where the title character is strongly encouraged to seek a new life off-planet. It concludes with a traditional Heinlein note, as in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress or Time Enough for Love, that freedom is to be found on the frontiers.

The 1984 novel Job: A Comedy of Justice is a sharp satire of organized religion. Heinlein himself was agnostic.[76][77]

Posthumous publications

Several Heinlein works have been published since his death, including the aforementioned For Us, the Living as well as 1989's Grumbles from the Grave, a collection of letters between Heinlein and his editors and agent; 1992's Tramp Royale, a travelogue of a southern hemisphere tour the Heinleins took in the 1950s; Take Back Your Government, a how-to book about participatory democracy written in 1946 and reflecting his experience as an organizer with the EPIC campaign of 1934 and the movement's aftermath as an important factor in California politics before the Second World War; and a tribute volume called Requiem: Collected Works and Tributes to the Grand Master, containing some additional short works previously unpublished in book form. Off the Main Sequence, published in 2005, includes three short stories never before collected in any Heinlein book (Heinlein called them "stinkeroos").

Spider Robinson, a colleague, friend, and admirer of Heinlein,[78] wrote Variable Star, based on an outline and notes for a novel that Heinlein prepared in 1955. The novel was published as a collaboration, with Heinlein's name above Robinson's on the cover, in 2006.

A complete collection of Heinlein's published work has been published[79] by the Heinlein Prize Trust as the "Virginia Edition", after his wife. See the Complete Works section of Robert A. Heinlein bibliography for details.

On February 1, 2019, Phoenix Pick announced that through a collaboration with the Heinlein Prize Trust, a reconstruction of the full text of an unpublished Heinlein novel had been produced. It was published in March 2020. The reconstructed novel, entitled The Pursuit of the Pankera: A Parallel Novel about Parallel Universes,[80] is an alternative version of The Number of the Beast, with the first one-third of The Pursuit of the Pankera mostly the same as the first one-third of The Number of the Beast but the remainder of The Pursuit of the Pankera deviating entirely from The Number of the Beast, with a completely different story-line. The newly reconstructed novel pays homage to Edgar Rice Burroughs and E. E. “Doc” Smith. It was edited by Patrick Lobrutto. Some reviewers describe the newly reconstructed novel as more in line with the style of a traditional Heinlein novel than was The Number of the Beast.[81] The Pursuit of the Pankera was considered superior to the original version of The Number of the Beast by some reviewers.[82] Both The Pursuit of the Pankera and a new edition of The Number of the Beast[83] were published in March 2020. The new edition of the latter shares the subtitle of The Pursuit of the Pankera, hence entitled The Number of the Beast: A Parallel Novel about Parallel Universes.[84][85]

Movies

Heinlein contributed to the final draft of the script for Destination Moon (1950) and served as a technical adviser for the film.[86] Heinlein also shared screenwriting credit for Project Moonbase (1953).

Influences

The primary influence on Heinlein's writing style may have been Rudyard Kipling. Kipling is the first known modern example of "indirect exposition", a writing technique for which Heinlein later became famous.[87] In his famous text on "On the Writing of Speculative Fiction", Heinlein quotes Kipling:

There are nine-and-sixty ways
Of constructing tribal lays
And every single one of them is right

Stranger in a Strange Land originated as a modernized version of Kipling's The Jungle Book. His wife suggested that the child be raised by Martians instead of wolves. Likewise, Citizen of the Galaxy can be seen as a reboot of Kipling's novel Kim.[88]

The Starship Troopers idea of needing to serve in the military in order to vote can be found in Kipling's "The Army of a Dream":

But as a little detail we never mention, if we don't volunteer in some corps or other—as combatants if we're fit, as non-combatants if we ain't—till we're thirty-five—we don't vote, and we don't get poor-relief, and the women don't love us.

Poul Anderson once said of Kipling's science fiction story "As Easy as A.B.C.", "a wonderful science fiction yarn, showing the same eye for detail that would later distinguish the work of Robert Heinlein".

Heinlein described himself as also being influenced by George Bernard Shaw, having read most of his plays.[89] Shaw is an example of an earlier author who used the competent man, a favorite Heinlein archetype.[90] He denied, though, any direct influence of Back to Methuselah on Methuselah's Children.

Views

 
Heinlein c. 1953

Heinlein's books probe a range of ideas about a range of topics such as sex, race, politics, and the military. Many were seen as radical or as ahead of their time in their social criticism. His books have inspired considerable debate about the specifics, and the evolution, of Heinlein's own opinions, and have earned him both lavish praise and a degree of criticism. He has also been accused of contradicting himself on various philosophical questions.[91]

Brian Doherty cites William Patterson, saying that the best way to gain an understanding of Heinlein is as a "full-service iconoclast, the unique individual who decides that things do not have to be, and won't continue, as they are". He says this vision is "at the heart of Heinlein, science fiction, libertarianism, and America. Heinlein imagined how everything about the human world, from our sexual mores to our religion to our automobiles to our government to our plans for cultural survival, might be flawed, even fatally so."[92]

The critic Elizabeth Anne Hull, for her part, has praised Heinlein for his interest in exploring fundamental life questions, especially questions about "political power—our responsibilities to one another" and about "personal freedom, particularly sexual freedom".[93]

Edward R. Murrow hosted a series on CBS Radio called This I Believe, which solicited an entry from Heinlein in 1952. Titled "Our Noble, Essential Decency", it is probably the most enduring and popular entry.[citation needed] In it, Heinlein broke with the normal trends, stating that he believed in his neighbors (some of whom he named and described), community, and towns across America that share the same sense of good will and intentions as his own, going on to apply this same philosophy to the US, and humanity in general.

I believe in my fellow citizens. Our headlines are splashed with crime. Yet for every criminal, there are ten thousand honest, decent, kindly men. If it were not so, no child would live to grow up. Business could not go on from day to day. Decency is not news. It is buried in the obituaries, but it is a force stronger than crime.

Politics

Heinlein's political positions shifted throughout his life. Heinlein's early political leanings were liberal.[94] In 1934, he worked actively for the Democratic campaign of Upton Sinclair for Governor of California. After Sinclair lost, Heinlein became an anti-Communist Democratic activist. He made an unsuccessful bid for a California State Assembly seat in 1938.[94] Heinlein's first novel, For Us, the Living (written 1939), consists largely of speeches advocating the Social Credit philosophy, and the early story "Misfit" (1939) deals with an organization—"The Cosmic Construction Corps"—that seems to be Franklin D. Roosevelt's Civilian Conservation Corps translated into outer space.[95]

Of this time in his life, Heinlein later said:

At the time I wrote Methuselah's Children I was still politically quite naïve and still had hopes that various libertarian notions could be put over by political processes ... It [now] seems to me that every time we manage to establish one freedom, they take another one away. Maybe two. And that seems to me characteristic of a society as it gets older, and more crowded, and higher taxes, and more laws.[89]

Heinlein's fiction of the 1940s and 1950s, however, began to espouse conservative views. After 1945, he came to believe that a strong world government was the only way to avoid mutual nuclear annihilation.[citation needed] His 1949 novel Space Cadet describes a future scenario where a military-controlled global government enforces world peace. Heinlein ceased considering himself a Democrat in 1954.[94]

The Heinleins formed the Patrick Henry League in 1958, and they worked in the 1964 Barry Goldwater presidential campaign.[25]

When Robert A. Heinlein opened his Colorado Springs newspaper on April 5, 1958, he read a full-page ad demanding that the Eisenhower Administration stop testing nuclear weapons. The science fiction author was flabbergasted. He called for the formation of the Patrick Henry League and spent the next several weeks writing and publishing his own polemic that lambasted "Communist-line goals concealed in idealistic-sounding nonsense" and urged Americans not to become "soft-headed".[63]

Heinlein's response ad was entitled "Who Are the Heirs of Patrick Henry?". It started with the famous Henry quotation: "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty, or give me death!!". It then went on to admit that there was some risk to nuclear testing (albeit less than the "willfully distorted" claims of the test ban advocates), and risk of nuclear war, but that "The alternative is surrender. We accept the risks." Heinlein was among those who in 1968 signed a pro–Vietnam War ad in Galaxy Science Fiction.[96]

Heinlein always considered himself a libertarian; in a letter to Judith Merril in 1967 (never sent) he said, "As for libertarian, I've been one all my life, a radical one. You might use the term 'philosophical anarchist' or 'autarchist' about me, but 'libertarian' is easier to define and fits well enough."[97]

Stranger in a Strange Land was embraced by the 1960s counterculture, and libertarians have found inspiration in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress. Both groups found resonance with his themes of personal freedom in both thought and action.[70]

Race

Heinlein grew up in the era of racial segregation in the United States and wrote some of his most influential fiction at the height of the Civil Rights Movement. He explicitly made the case for using his fiction not only to predict the future but also to educate his readers about the value of racial equality and the importance of racial tolerance.[98] His early novels were very much ahead of their time both in their explicit rejection of racism and in their inclusion of protagonists of color. In the context of science fiction before the 1960s, the mere existence of characters of color was a remarkable novelty, with green occurring more often than brown.[99] For example, his 1948 novel Space Cadet explicitly uses aliens as a metaphor for minorities. In his novel The Star Beast, the de facto foreign minister of the Terran government is an undersecretary, a Mr. Kiku, who is from Africa.[100] Heinlein explicitly states his skin is "ebony black" and that Kiku is in an arranged marriage that is happy.[101]

In a number of his stories, Heinlein challenges his readers' possible racial preconceptions by introducing a strong, sympathetic character, only to reveal much later that he or she is of African or other ancestry. In several cases, the covers of the books show characters as being light-skinned when the text states or at least implies that they are dark-skinned or of African ancestry.[104] Heinlein repeatedly denounced racism in his nonfiction works, including numerous examples in Expanded Universe.

Heinlein reveals in Starship Troopers that the novel's protagonist and narrator, Johnny Rico, the formerly disaffected scion of a wealthy family, is Filipino, actually named "Juan Rico" and speaks Tagalog in addition to English.

Race was a central theme in some of Heinlein's fiction. The most prominent example is Farnham's Freehold, which casts a white family into a future in which white people are the slaves of cannibalistic black rulers. In the 1941 novel Sixth Column (also known as The Day After Tomorrow), a white resistance movement in the United States defends itself against an invasion by an Asian fascist state (the "Pan-Asians") using a "super-science" technology that allows ray weapons to be tuned to specific races. The book is sprinkled with racist slurs against Asian people, and black and Hispanic people are not mentioned at all. The idea for the story was pushed on Heinlein by editor John W. Campbell and the story itself was based on a then-unpublished story by Campbell, and Heinlein wrote later that he had "had to re-slant it to remove racist aspects of the original story line" and that he did not "consider it to be an artistic success".[105][106] However, the novel prompted a heated debate in the scientific community regarding the plausibility of developing ethnic bioweapons.[107] John Hickman, writing in the European Journal of American Studies, identifies examples of anti–East Asian racism in some of Heinlein's works, particularly Sixth Column.[108]

Heinlein summed up his attitude toward people of any race in his essay "Our Noble, Essential Decency" thus:

And finally, I believe in my whole race—yellow, white, black, red, brown—in the honesty, courage, intelligence, durability, and goodness of the overwhelming majority of my brothers and sisters everywhere on this planet. I am proud to be a human being.

Individualism and self-determination

In keeping with his belief in individualism, his work for adults—and sometimes even his work for juveniles—often portrays both the oppressors and the oppressed with considerable ambiguity. Heinlein believed that individualism was incompatible with ignorance. He believed that an appropriate level of adult competence was achieved through a wide-ranging education, whether this occurred in a classroom or not. In his juvenile novels, more than once a character looks with disdain at a student's choice of classwork, saying, "Why didn't you study something useful?"[109] In Time Enough for Love, Lazarus Long gives a long list of capabilities that anyone should have, concluding, "Specialization is for insects." The ability of the individual to create himself is explored in stories such as I Will Fear No Evil, "'—All You Zombies—'", and "By His Bootstraps".

Heinlein claimed to have written Starship Troopers in response to "calls for the unilateral ending of nuclear testing by the United States".[110] Heinlein suggests in the book that the Bugs are a good example of Communism being something that humans cannot successfully adhere to, since humans are strongly defined individuals, whereas the Bugs, being a collective, can all contribute to the whole without consideration of individual desire.[111]

Sexual issues

For Heinlein, personal liberation included sexual liberation, and free love was a major subject of his writing starting in 1939, with For Us, the Living. During his early period, Heinlein's writing for younger readers needed to take account of both editorial perceptions of sexuality in his novels, and potential perceptions among the buying public; as critic William H. Patterson has put it, his dilemma was "to sort out what was really objectionable from what was only excessive over-sensitivity to imaginary librarians".[112]

By his middle period, sexual freedom and the elimination of sexual jealousy became a major theme; for instance, in Stranger in a Strange Land (1961), the progressively minded but sexually conservative reporter, Ben Caxton, acts as a dramatic foil for the less parochial characters, Jubal Harshaw and Valentine Michael Smith (Mike). Another of the main characters, Jill, is homophobic, and says that "nine times out of ten, if a girl gets raped it's partly her own fault."[113]

According to Gary Westfahl,

Heinlein is a problematic case for feminists; on the one hand, his works often feature strong female characters and vigorous statements that women are equal to or even superior to men; but these characters and statements often reflect hopelessly stereotypical attitudes about typical female attributes. It is disconcerting, for example, that in Expanded Universe Heinlein calls for a society where all lawyers and politicians are women, essentially on the grounds that they possess a mysterious feminine practicality that men cannot duplicate.[114]

In books written as early as 1956, Heinlein dealt with incest and the sexual nature of children. Many of his books including Time for the Stars, Glory Road, Time Enough for Love, and The Number of the Beast dealt explicitly or implicitly with incest, sexual feelings and relations between adults, children, or both.[115] The treatment of these themes include the romantic relationship and eventual marriage of two characters in The Door into Summer who met when one was a 30-year-old engineer and the other was an 11-year-old girl, and who eventually married when time-travel rendered the girl an adult while the engineer aged minimally, or the more overt intra-familial incest in To Sail Beyond the Sunset and Farnham's Freehold. Heinlein often posed situations where the nominal purpose of sexual taboos was irrelevant to a particular situation, due to future advances in technology. For example, in Time Enough for Love Heinlein describes a brother and sister (Joe and Llita) who were mirror twins, being complementary diploids with entirely disjoint genomes, and thus not at increased risk for unfavorable gene duplication due to consanguinity. In this instance, Llita and Joe were props used to explore the concept of incest, where the usual objection to incest—heightened risk of genetic defect in their children—was not a consideration.[116] Peers such as L. Sprague de Camp and Damon Knight have commented critically on Heinlein's portrayal of incest and pedophilia in a lighthearted and even approving manner.[115] Diane Parkin-Speer suggests that Heinlein's intent seems more to provoke the reader and to question sexual norms than to promote any particular sexual agenda.[117]

Philosophy

In To Sail Beyond the Sunset, Heinlein has the main character, Maureen, state that the purpose of metaphysics is to ask questions: "Why are we here?" "Where are we going after we die?" (and so on); and that you are not allowed to answer the questions. Asking the questions is the point of metaphysics, but answering them is not, because once you answer this kind of question, you cross the line into religion. Maureen does not state a reason for this; she simply remarks that such questions are "beautiful" but lack answers. Maureen's son/lover Lazarus Long makes a related remark in Time Enough for Love. In order for us to answer the "big questions" about the universe, Lazarus states at one point, it would be necessary to stand outside the universe.

During the 1930s and 1940s, Heinlein was deeply interested in Alfred Korzybski's general semantics and attended a number of seminars on the subject. His views on epistemology seem to have flowed from that interest, and his fictional characters continue to express Korzybskian views to the very end of his writing career. Many of his stories, such as Gulf, If This Goes On—, and Stranger in a Strange Land, depend strongly on the premise, related to the well-known Sapir–Whorf hypothesis, that by using a correctly designed language, one can change or improve oneself mentally, or even realize untapped potential (as in the case of Joe in Gulf—whose last name may be Greene, Gilead or Briggs).[118]

When Ayn Rand's novel The Fountainhead was published, Heinlein was very favorably impressed, as quoted in "Grumbles ..." and mentioned John Galt—the hero in Rand's Atlas Shrugged—as a heroic archetype in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress. He was also strongly affected by the religious philosopher P. D. Ouspensky.[18] Freudianism and psychoanalysis were at the height of their influence during the peak of Heinlein's career, and stories such as Time for the Stars indulged in psychological theorizing.

However, he was skeptical about Freudianism, especially after a struggle with an editor who insisted on reading Freudian sexual symbolism into his juvenile novels. Heinlein was fascinated by the social credit movement in the 1930s. This is shown in Beyond This Horizon and in his 1938 novel For Us, the Living: A Comedy of Customs, which was finally published in 2003, long after his death.

Pay it forward

On that theme, the phrase "pay it forward", though it was already in occasional use as a quotation, was popularized by Robert A. Heinlein in his book Between Planets,[119] published in 1951:

The banker reached into the folds of his gown, pulled out a single credit note. "But eat first—a full belly steadies the judgment. Do me the honor of accepting this as our welcome to the newcomer."

His pride said no; his stomach said YES! Don took it and said, "Uh, thanks! That's awfully kind of you. I'll pay it back, first chance."

"Instead, pay it forward to some other brother who needs it."

He referred to this in a number of other stories, although sometimes just saying to pay a debt back by helping others, as in one of his last works, Job, a Comedy of Justice.

Heinlein was a mentor to Ray Bradbury, giving him help and quite possibly passing on the concept, made famous by the publication of a letter from him to Heinlein thanking him.[120] In Bradbury's novel Dandelion Wine, published in 1957, when the main character Douglas Spaulding is reflecting on his life being saved by Mr. Jonas, the Junkman:

How do I thank Mr. Jonas, he wondered, for what he's done? How do I thank him, how pay him back? No way, no way at all. You just can't pay. What then? What? Pass it on somehow, he thought, pass it on to someone else. Keep the chain moving. Look around, find someone, and pass it on. That was the only way ...

Bradbury has also advised that writers he has helped thank him by helping other writers.[121]

Heinlein both preached and practiced this philosophy; now the Heinlein Society, a humanitarian organization founded in his name, does so, attributing the philosophy to its various efforts, including Heinlein for Heroes, the Heinlein Society Scholarship Program, and Heinlein Society blood drives.[122] Author Spider Robinson made repeated reference to the doctrine, attributing it to his spiritual mentor Heinlein.[123]

Influence and legacy

Honorifics

Heinlein is usually identified, along with Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke, as one of the three masters of science fiction to arise in the so-called Golden Age of science fiction, associated with John W. Campbell and his magazine Astounding.[124] In the 1950s he was a leader in bringing science fiction out of the low-paying and less prestigious "pulp ghetto". Most of his works, including short stories, have been continuously in print in many languages since their initial appearance and are still available as new paperbacks decades after his death.

He was at the top of his form during, and himself helped to initiate, the trend toward social science fiction, which went along with a general maturing of the genre away from space opera to a more literary approach touching on such adult issues as politics and human sexuality. In reaction to this trend, hard science fiction began to be distinguished as a separate subgenre, but paradoxically Heinlein is also considered a seminal figure in hard science fiction, due to his extensive knowledge of engineering and the careful scientific research demonstrated in his stories. Heinlein himself stated—with obvious pride—that in the days before pocket calculators, he and his wife Virginia once worked for several days on a mathematical equation describing an Earth–Mars rocket orbit, which was then subsumed in a single sentence of the novel Space Cadet.

Writing style

Heinlein is often credited with bringing serious writing techniques to the genre of science fiction. For example, when writing about fictional worlds, previous authors were often limited by the reader's existing knowledge of a typical "space opera" setting, leading to a relatively low creativity level: The same starships, death rays, and horrifying rubbery aliens becoming ubiquitous. This was necessary unless the author was willing to go into long expositions about the setting of the story, at a time when the word count was at a premium in SF.

But Heinlein utilized a technique called "indirect exposition", perhaps first introduced by Rudyard Kipling in his own science fiction venture, the Aerial Board of Control stories. Kipling had picked this up during his time in India, using it to avoid bogging down his stories set in India with explanations for his English readers.[125] This technique—mentioning details in a way that lets the reader infer more about the universe than is actually spelled out[126] became a trademark rhetorical technique of both Heinlein and generation of writers influenced by him. Heinlein was significantly influenced by Kipling beyond this, for example quoting him in "On the Writing of Speculative Fiction".[127]

Likewise, Heinlein's name is often associated with the competent hero, a character archetype who, though he or she may have flaws and limitations, is a strong, accomplished person able to overcome any soluble problem set in their path. They tend to feel confident overall, have a broad life experience and set of skills, and not give up when the going gets tough. This style influenced not only the writing style of a generation of authors, but even their personal character. Harlan Ellison once said, "Very early in life when I read Robert Heinlein I got the thread that runs through his stories—the notion of the competent man ... I've always held that as my ideal. I've tried to be a very competent man."[128]

Rules of writing

When fellow writers, or fans, wrote Heinlein asking for writing advice, he famously gave out his own list of rules for becoming a successful writer:

  1. You must write.
  2. Finish what you start.
  3. You must refrain from rewriting, except to editorial order.
  4. You must put your story on the market.
  5. You must keep it on the market until it has sold.

About which he said:

The above five rules really have more to do with how to write speculative fiction than anything said above them. But they are amazingly hard to follow—which is why there are so few professional writers and so many aspirants, and which is why I am not afraid to give away the racket![129]

Heinlein later published an entire article, "On the Writing of Speculative Fiction", which included his rules, and from which the above quote is taken. When he says "anything said above them", he refers to his other guidelines. For example, he describes most stories as fitting into one of a handful of basic categories:

  • The gadget story
  • The human interest story
  • Boy meets girl
  • The Little Tailor
  • The man-who-learned-better

In the article, Heinlein proposes that most stories fit into the either the gadget story or the human interest story, which is itself subdivided into the three latter categories. He also credits L. Ron Hubbard as having identified "The Man-Who-Learned-Better".

Influence among writers

Heinlein has had a pervasive influence on other science fiction writers. In a 1953 poll of leading science fiction authors, he was cited more frequently as an influence than any other modern writer.[130] Critic James Gifford writes that

Although many other writers have exceeded Heinlein's output, few can claim to match his broad and seminal influence. Scores of science fiction writers from the prewar Golden Age through the present day loudly and enthusiastically credit Heinlein for blazing the trails of their own careers, and shaping their styles and stories.

— Robert A. Heinlein, A Reader's Companion, p. xiii

Heinlein gave Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle extensive advice on a draft manuscript of The Mote in God's Eye.[131] He contributed a cover blurb "Possibly the finest science fiction novel I have ever read." Writer David Gerrold, responsible for creating the tribbles in Star Trek, also credited Heinlein as the inspiration for his Dingilliad series of novels. Gregory Benford refers to his novel Jupiter Project as a Heinlein tribute. Similarly, Charles Stross says his Hugo Award-nominated novel Saturn's Children is "a space opera and late-period Robert A. Heinlein tribute",[132] referring to Heinlein's Friday.[133] The theme and plot of Kameron Hurley's novel, The Light Brigade clearly echo those of Heinlein's Starship Troopers.[134]

Words and phrases coined

Even outside the science fiction community, several words and phrases coined or adopted by Heinlein have passed into common English usage:

  • Waldo, protagonist in the eponymous short story "Waldo", whose name came to mean mechanical or robot arms in the real world that are akin to the ones used by the character in the story.
  • Moonbat[135] used in United States politics as a pejorative political epithet referring to progressives or leftists, was originally the name of a space ship in his story "Space Jockey".
  • Grok, a "Martian" word for understanding a thing so fully as to become one with it, from Stranger in a Strange Land, whose root meaning in Martian is "to drink".
  • Space marine, an existing term popularized by Heinlein in short stories, the concept then being made famous by Starship Troopers, though the term "space marine" is not used in that novel.
  • Speculative fiction, a term Heinlein used for the separation of serious, consistent science fiction writing, from the pop "sci fi" of the day.

Inspiring culture and technology

In 1962, Oberon Zell-Ravenheart (then still using his birth name, Tim Zell) founded the Church of All Worlds, a Neopagan religious organization modeled in many ways (including its name) after the treatment of religion in the novel Stranger in a Strange Land. This spiritual path included several ideas from the book, including non-mainstream family structures, social libertarianism, water-sharing rituals, an acceptance of all religious paths by a single tradition, and the use of several terms such as "grok", "Thou art God", and "Never Thirst". Though Heinlein was neither a member nor a promoter of the Church, there was a frequent exchange of correspondence between Zell and Heinlein, and he was a paid subscriber to their magazine, Green Egg. This Church still exists as a 501(C)(3) religious organization incorporated in California, with membership worldwide, and it remains an active part of the neopagan community today.[136] Zell-Ravenheart's wife, Morning Glory coined the term polyamory in 1990,[137] another movement that includes Heinlein concepts among its roots.

Heinlein was influential in making space exploration seem to the public more like a practical possibility. His stories in publications such as The Saturday Evening Post took a matter-of-fact approach to their outer-space setting, rather than the "gee whiz" tone that had previously been common. The documentary-like film Destination Moon advocated a Space Race with an unspecified foreign power almost a decade before such an idea became commonplace, and was promoted by an unprecedented publicity campaign in print publications. Many of the astronauts and others working in the U.S. space program grew up on a diet of the Heinlein juveniles,[original research?] best evidenced by the naming of a crater on Mars after him, and a tribute interspersed by the Apollo 15 astronauts into their radio conversations while on the moon.[138]

Heinlein was also a guest commentator (along with fellow SF author Arthur C. Clarke) for Walter Cronkite's coverage of the Apollo 11 Moon landing.[139] He remarked to Cronkite during the landing that, "This is the greatest event in human history, up to this time. This is—today is New Year's Day of the Year One."[140]

Heinlein has inspired many transformational figures in business and technology including Lee Felsenstein, the designer of the first mass-produced portable computer,[141] Marc Andreessen,[142] co-author of the first widely-used web browser, and Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and founder of SpaceX.[143]

Heinlein Society

The Heinlein Society was founded by Virginia Heinlein on behalf of her husband, to "pay forward" the legacy of the writer to future generations of "Heinlein's Children". The foundation has programs to:

  • "Promote Heinlein blood drives."
  • "Provide educational materials to educators."
  • "Promote scholarly research and overall discussion of the works and ideas of Robert Anson Heinlein."

The Heinlein society also established the Robert A. Heinlein Award in 2003 "for outstanding published works in science fiction and technical writings to inspire the human exploration of space".[144][145]

In popular culture

Television

  • In the 1967 Star Trek television episode "The Trouble with Tribbles", the title creatures in the episode resemble the Martian flat cats in Heinlein's 1952 novel The Rolling Stones. Script writer David Gerrold was concerned that he had inadvertently plagiarized the novel which he had read fifteen years before.[146] These concerns were brought up by a research team, who suggested that the rights to the novel should be purchased from Heinlein. One of the producers phoned Heinlein, who only asked for a signed copy of the script and later sent a note to Gerrold after it aired to thank him for the script.[147]

Literature

Music

Honors

 
Orbital path of Robert Heinlein's eponymous asteroid

In his lifetime, Heinlein received four Hugo Awards, for Double Star, Starship Troopers, Stranger in a Strange Land, and The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, and was nominated for four Nebula Awards, for The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, Friday, Time Enough for Love, and Job: A Comedy of Justice.[155] He was also given seven Retro-Hugos: two for best novel: Beyond This Horizon and Farmer in the Sky; three for best novella: If This Goes On..., Waldo, and The Man Who Sold the Moon; one for best novelette: "The Roads Must Roll"; and one for best dramatic presentation: "Destination Moon".[156][157][158]

Heinlein was also nominated for six Hugo Awards for the works Have Space Suit: Will Travel, Glory Road, Time Enough for Love, Friday, Job: A Comedy of Justice and Grumbles from the Grave, as well as six Retro Hugo Awards for Magic, Inc., "Requiem", "Coventry", "Blowups Happen", "Goldfish Bowl", and "The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag".

The Science Fiction Writers of America named Heinlein its first Grand Master in 1974, presented 1975. Officers and past presidents of the Association select a living writer for lifetime achievement (now annually and including fantasy literature).[14][15] In 1977, he was awarded the Inkpot Award.[159]

Main-belt asteroid 6312 Robheinlein (1990 RH4), discovered on September 14, 1990, by H. E. Holt at Palomar, was named after him.[160]

There is no lunar feature named explicitly for Heinlein, but in 1994 the International Astronomical Union named Heinlein crater on Mars in his honor.[161][162]

The Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame inducted Heinlein in 1998, its third class of two deceased and two living writers and editors.[163]

In 2001 the United States Naval Academy created the Robert A. Heinlein Chair in Aerospace Engineering.[164]

Heinlein was the Ghost of Honor at the 2008 World Science Fiction Convention in Denver, Colorado, which held several panels on his works; nearly seventy years earlier, he had been a Guest of Honor at the same convention.[165]

In 2016, after an intensive online campaign to win a vote for the opening, Heinlein was inducted into the Hall of Famous Missourians.[166] His bronze bust, created by Kansas City sculptor E. Spencer Schubert, is on permanent display in the Missouri State Capitol in Jefferson City.[167]

The Libertarian Futurist Society has honored eight of Heinlein's novels and two short stories with their Hall of Fame award.[168] The first two were given during his lifetime for The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress and Stranger in a Strange Land. Five more were awarded posthumously for Red Planet, Methuselah's Children, Time Enough for Love, and the short stories "Requiem" and "Coventry".

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b Woo, Elaine (January 26, 2003). "Virginia Heinlein, 86; Wife, Muse and Literary Guardian of Celebrated Science Fiction Writer". Los Angeles Times. from the original on November 12, 2016. Retrieved June 25, 2017. Also reproduced at The Heinlein Society December 18, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Wells, John C. (2008). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3 ed.). Longman.
  3. ^ a b c d Houdek, D. A. (2003). . The Heinlein Society. Archived from the original on April 3, 2012. Retrieved January 23, 2007.
  4. ^ "Say How? A Pronunciation Guide to Names of Public Figures". Library of Congress, National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (NLS). September 21, 2006. from the original on October 6, 2019. Retrieved January 23, 2007.
  5. ^ Booker, M. Keith; Thomas, Anne-Marie (2009). The Science Fiction Handbook. Blackwell Guides to Literature Series. John Wiley & Sons. p. 155. ISBN 978-1-4051-6205-0. from the original on July 5, 2019. Retrieved June 27, 2018. Sometimes called the 'dean of science fiction writers,' Robert A. Heinlein was one of the leading figures of science fiction's Golden Age and one of the authors most responsible for establishing the science fiction novel as a publishing category.
  6. ^ Mendlesohn, Farah (2019). The Pleasant Profession of Robert A. Heinlein. London: Unbound Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78352-678-9.
  7. ^ "Robert Heinlein's softer side". The Guardian. January 12, 2009. from the original on January 25, 2021. Retrieved June 5, 2021.
  8. ^ "The Big Three—Asimov—Clarke—Heinlein—A Bibliography". SFandFantasy.co.uk. from the original on September 1, 2016. Retrieved August 28, 2016. Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke and Robert Heinlein are informally known as the "Big Three"—the best known members of the group of authors who brought science fiction into a Golden Age in the middle years of the twentieth century
  9. ^ Parrinder, Patrick (2001). Learning from Other Worlds: Estrangement, Cognition, and the Politics of Science Fiction and Utopia. Duke University Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-8223-2773-8. This short discussion of Asimov, Clarke and Heinlein—the so-called Big Three, who largely dominated American (and, to a lesser extent, Anglo-American) science fiction during the 1940s, the 1950s and well into the 1960s—should serve to suggest the particularly complex affinity between science fiction and critical theory in its Blochian version.
  10. ^ "Science Fiction Writer Robert J. Sawyer: The Death of Science Fiction". SF writer. from the original on May 2, 2012. Retrieved November 26, 2017. And yet, the publishers do whatever they can to continue to milk the big three: Asimov, Clarke, and Heinlein
  11. ^ "15 Things You Might Not Know About Stranger in a Strange Land". Mental floss. July 14, 2015. from the original on April 14, 2017. Retrieved November 26, 2017.
  12. ^ a b c "Was Robert A. Heinlein a Libertarian?". Mises Institute. May 18, 2010. from the original on December 11, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2017.
  13. ^ Lord, M. G. (October 2, 2005). "Heinlein's Female Troubles". The New York Times. from the original on February 13, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  14. ^ a b "Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master" July 1, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA). Retrieved March 23, 2013.
  15. ^ a b "Robert A. Heinlein Awards". Science Fiction Awards Database. Locus Science Fiction Foundation. from the original on December 18, 2019. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
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  17. ^ Patterson, William (2010). "Appendix 2". Robert A. Heinlein: 1907–1948, learning curve. New York: Tom Doherty Associates. ISBN 978-0-7653-1960-9. Retrieved June 29, 2014.
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  19. ^ "3". Sci-fi Literature Genius Guide. Imagine Publishing. June 14, 2012. ISBN 9781908222183.
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  22. ^ James Gunn, "Grand Master Award Remarks" September 29, 2011, at the Wayback Machine; "Credit Col. Earp and Gen. Heinlein with the Reactivation of Nevada's Camp Clark", The Nevada Daily Mail, June 27, 1966.
  23. ^ "Social Affairs of the Army and Navy", Los Angeles Times; September 1, 1929; p. B8.
  24. ^ Patterson, William H. Robert A. Heinlein: In Dialogue with His Century, Vol. 1—Learning Curve (1907–1948), Tor Books, August 2010, ISBN 978-0-7653-1960-9
  25. ^ a b Isaac Asimov, I, Asimov.
  26. ^ Patterson, William (2010). "Chapter 27". Robert A. Heinlein: 1907–1948, learning curve. New York: Tom Doherty Associates. ISBN 978-0-7653-1960-9. Retrieved April 12, 2011.
  27. ^ "Colorado Voices: The festival of history". May 31, 2011. from the original on December 2, 2020. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
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  34. ^ Afterword to For Us, the Living: A Comedy of Customs, 2004 edition, p. 245.
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  36. ^ (afterword to For Us, the Living: A Comedy of Customs, 2004 edition, p. 247, and the story "A Bathroom of Her Own"). Also, an unfortunate juxtaposition of events had a Konrad Henlein making headlines in the Sudetenlands.
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  45. ^ On Paul Dirac and antimatter, and on blood chemistry. A version of the former, titled Paul Dirac, Antimatter, and You, was published in the anthology Expanded Universe, and it demonstrates both Heinlein's skill as a popularizer and his lack of depth in physics. An afterword gives a normalization equation and presents it, incorrectly, as being the Dirac equation.
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  48. ^ non sequitur
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Other sources

Critical

A critique of Heinlein from a Marxist perspective. Includes a biographical chapter, which incorporates some original research on Heinlein's family background.
A comprehensive bibliography, with roughly one page of commentary on each of Heinlein's works.
  • Farah Mendlesohn 2019. Pleasant Profession of Robert A. Heinlein ISBN 978-1-78352-678-9
  • Alexei Panshin. 1968. Heinlein in Dimension. Advent. ISBN 0-911682-12-0, 978-0-911682-01-4. OCLC 7535112
  • Patterson, William H., Jr., and Thornton, Andrew. 2001. The Martian Named Smith: Critical Perspectives on Robert A. Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land. Sacramento: Nitrosyncretic Press. ISBN 0-9679874-2-3.
  • Powell, Jim. 2000. The Triumph of Liberty. New York: Free Press. See profile of Heinlein in the chapter "Out of this World".
  • Tom Shippey. 2000. "Starship Troopers, Galactic Heroes, Mercenary Princes: Ihe Military and Its Discontents in Science Fiction", in Alan Sandison and Robert Dingley, eds., Histories of the Future: Studies in Fact, Fantasy and Science Fiction. New York: Palgrave. ISBN 0-312-23604-2.
  • George Edgar Slusser "Robert A. Heinlein: Stranger in His Own Land". The Milford Series, Popular Writers of Today, Vol. 1. San Bernardino, CA: The Borgo Press
  • Slusser, George Edgar (1977). The classic years of Robert A. Heinlein. San Bernardino, CA: Borgo Press. ISBN 978-0893702168.
  • James Blish, writing as William Atheling, Jr. 1970. More Issues at Hand. Chicago: Advent.
  • Bellagamba, Ugo and Picholle, Eric. 2008. Solutions Non Satisfaisantes, une Anatomie de Robert A. Heinlein. Lyon, France: Les Moutons Electriques. ISBN 978-2-915793-37-6. (in French)

Biographical

  • Patterson, William H., Jr. 2010. Robert A. Heinlein in Dialogue With His Century: 1907–1948: Learning Curve. An Authorized Biography, Volume I. Tom Doherty Associates. ISBN 0-7653-1960-8
  • Patterson, William H., Jr. 2014. Robert A. Heinlein in Dialogue With His Century: 1948–1988: The Man Who Learned Better. An Authorized Biography, Volume II. Tom Doherty Associates. ISBN 0-7653-1961-6
  • Heinlein, Robert A. 2004. For Us, the Living. New York: Scribner. ISBN 0-7432-5998-X.
Includes an introduction by Spider Robinson, an afterword by Robert E. James with a long biography, and a shorter biographical sketch.
  • Patterson, William H. Jr. (1999). "Robert Heinlein—A biographical sketch". The Heinlein Journal. 1999 (5): 7–36. Also available at 'Robert A. Heinlein': A Biographical Sketch August 14, 2001, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved June 1, 2005.
A lengthy essay that treats Heinlein's own autobiographical statements with skepticism.
Contains a shorter version of the Patterson bio.
  • Heinlein, Robert A. 1989. Grumbles from the Grave. New York: Del Rey.
Incorporates a substantial biographical sketch by Virginia Heinlein, which hews closely to his earlier official bios, omitting the same facts (the first of his three marriages, his early left-wing political activities) and repeating the same fictional anecdotes (the short story contest).
  • Vicary, Elizabeth Zoe. 2000. American National Biography Online article, Heinlein, Robert Anson. Retrieved June 1, 2005 (not available for free).
Repeats many incorrect statements from Heinlein's fictionalized professional bio.
Autobiographical notes are interspersed between the pieces in the anthology.
Reprinted by Baen, hardcover October 2003, ISBN 0-7434-7159-8.
Reprinted by Baen, paperback July 2005, ISBN 0-7434-9915-8.
  • Stover, Leon. 1987. Robert Heinlein. Boston: Twayne.

External links

  • The Heinlein Society
  • site:RAH
  • Heinlein Archives
  • Robert & Virginia Heinlein Prize
  • , July 7, 2007.
  • Heinlein Nexus October 27, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, the community continuation of the Centennial effort.
  • accessed June 3, 2005
  • Heinleinia.com, an interactive exploration of Heinlein's life and works
  • Heinlein giving the Guest of Honor speech at the 34th World Science Fiction Convention, on YouTube

Biography and criticism

Bibliography and works

robert, heinlein, robert, anson, heinlein, july, 1907, 1988, american, science, fiction, author, aeronautical, engineer, naval, officer, sometimes, called, dean, science, fiction, writers, among, first, emphasize, scientific, accuracy, fiction, thus, pioneer, . Robert Anson Heinlein ˈ h aɪ n l aɪ n 2 3 4 July 7 1907 May 8 1988 was an American science fiction author aeronautical engineer and naval officer Sometimes called the dean of science fiction writers 5 he was among the first to emphasize scientific accuracy in his fiction and was thus a pioneer of the subgenre of hard science fiction His published works both fiction and non fiction express admiration for competence and emphasize the value of critical thinking 6 His plots often posed provocative situations which challenged conventional social mores 7 His work continues to have an influence on the science fiction genre and on modern culture more generally Robert A HeinleinHeinlein in 1976BornRobert Anson Heinlein 1907 07 07 July 7 1907Butler Missouri U S DiedMay 8 1988 1988 05 08 aged 80 Carmel by the Sea California U S Pen nameAnson MacDonaldLyle MonroeJohn RiversideCaleb SaundersSimon YorkOccupationAuthor aeronautical engineer lieutenant USN 1 Alma materUnited States Naval Academy University of California Los Angeles incomplete Period1939 1988GenreScience fiction fantasyNotable worksStranger in a Strange Land The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress Starship Troopers Time Enough for LoveSpouseElinor Curry m 1929 div 1930 wbr Leslyn MacDonald m 1932 div 1947 wbr Virginia Gerstenfeld m 1948 wbr SignatureHeinlein became one of the first American science fiction writers to break into mainstream magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post in the late 1940s He was one of the best selling science fiction novelists for many decades and he Isaac Asimov and Arthur C Clarke are often considered the Big Three of English language science fiction authors 8 9 10 Notable Heinlein works include Stranger in a Strange Land 11 Starship Troopers which helped mold the space marine and mecha archetypes and The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress 12 His work sometimes had controversial aspects such as plural marriage in The Moon is a Harsh Mistress militarism in Starship Troopers and technologically competent women characters that were formidable 13 yet often stereotypically feminine such as Friday A writer also of many science fiction short stories Heinlein was one of a group of writers who came to prominence under the editorship 1937 1971 of John W Campbell at Astounding Science Fiction magazine though Heinlein denied that Campbell influenced his writing to any great degree Heinlein used his science fiction as a way to explore provocative social and political ideas and to speculate how progress in science and engineering might shape the future of politics race religion and sex 12 Within the framework of his science fiction stories Heinlein repeatedly addressed certain social themes the importance of individual liberty and self reliance the nature of sexual relationships the obligation individuals owe to their societies the influence of organized religion on culture and government and the tendency of society to repress nonconformist thought He also speculated on the influence of space travel on human cultural practices Heinlein was named the first Science Fiction Writers Grand Master in 1974 14 Four of his novels won Hugo Awards In addition fifty years after publication seven of his works were awarded Retro Hugos awards given retrospectively for works that were published before the Hugo Awards came into existence 15 In his fiction Heinlein coined terms that have become part of the English language including grok waldo and speculative fiction as well as popularizing existing terms like TANSTAAFL pay it forward and space marine He also anticipated mechanical computer aided design with Drafting Dan and described a modern version of a waterbed in his novel Beyond This Horizon 16 Several of Heinlein s works have been adapted for film and television Contents 1 Life 1 1 Birth childhood and early education 1 2 Navy 1 3 Marriages 1 4 California 1 5 Author 1 6 Later life and death 2 Written works 2 1 Series 2 2 Early work 1939 1958 2 3 1959 1960 2 4 Middle period work 1961 1973 2 5 Later work 1980 1987 2 6 Posthumous publications 3 Movies 4 Influences 5 Views 5 1 Politics 5 2 Race 5 3 Individualism and self determination 5 4 Sexual issues 5 5 Philosophy 5 5 1 Pay it forward 6 Influence and legacy 6 1 Honorifics 6 2 Writing style 6 2 1 Rules of writing 6 3 Influence among writers 6 4 Words and phrases coined 6 5 Inspiring culture and technology 6 6 Heinlein Society 6 7 In popular culture 7 Honors 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Other sources 9 2 1 Critical 9 2 2 Biographical 10 External links 10 1 Biography and criticism 10 2 Bibliography and worksLife Edit Midshipman Heinlein from the 1929 U S Naval Academy yearbook Birth childhood and early education Edit Heinlein born on July 7 1907 to Rex Ivar Heinlein an accountant and Bam Lyle Heinlein in Butler Missouri was the third of seven children He was a sixth generation German American a family tradition had it that Heinleins fought in every American war starting with the War of Independence 17 He spent his childhood in Kansas City Missouri 18 The outlook and values of this time and place in his own words The Bible Belt had an influence on his fiction especially in his later works as he drew heavily upon his childhood in establishing the setting and cultural atmosphere in works like Time Enough for Love and To Sail Beyond the Sunset The 1910 appearance of Halley s Comet inspired the young child s life long interest in astronomy 19 The family could not afford to send Heinlein to college so he sought an appointment to a military academy 20 When Heinlein graduated from Central High School in Kansas City in 1924 he was initially prevented from attending the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis because his older brother Rex was a student there and regulations discouraged multiple family members from attending the academy simultaneously citation needed He instead matriculated at Kansas City Community College and began vigorously petitioning Missouri Senator James A Reed for an appointment to the Naval Academy In part due to the influence of the Pendergast machine the Naval Academy admitted him in June 1925 12 Reed later told Heinlein that he had received 100 letters of recommendation for nomination to the Naval Academy 50 for other candidates and 50 for Heinlein 20 Navy Edit Heinlein s experience in the U S Navy exerted a strong influence on his character and writing In 1929 he graduated from the Naval Academy with the equivalent of a bachelor of arts in engineering the Academy did not at the time confer degrees He ranked fifth in his class academically but with a class standing of 20th of 243 due to disciplinary demerits The U S Navy commissioned him as an ensign shortly after his graduation He advanced to lieutenant junior grade in 1931 while serving aboard the new aircraft carrier USS Lexington where he worked in radio communications a technology then still in its earlier stages The captain of this carrier Ernest J King later served as the Chief of Naval Operations and Commander in Chief U S Fleet during World War II Military historians frequently quantify interviewed Heinlein during his later years and asked him about Captain King and his service as the commander of the U S Navy s first modern aircraft carrier Heinlein also served as gunnery officer aboard the destroyer USS Roper in 1933 and 1934 reaching the rank of lieutenant 21 His brother Lawrence Heinlein served in the U S Army the U S Air Force and the Missouri National Guard reaching the rank of major general in the National Guard 22 Marriages Edit In 1929 Heinlein married Elinor Curry of Kansas City 23 However their marriage lasted only about a year 3 His second marriage in 1932 to Leslyn MacDonald 1904 1981 lasted for 15 years MacDonald was according to the testimony of Heinlein s Navy friend Rear Admiral Cal Laning astonishingly intelligent widely read and extremely liberal though a registered Republican 24 while Isaac Asimov later recalled that Heinlein was at the time a flaming liberal 25 See section Politics of Robert Heinlein Virginia and Robert Heinlein in a 1952 Popular Mechanics article titled A House to Make Life Easy The Heinleins both engineers designed the house for themselves with many innovative features At the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard Heinlein met and befriended a chemical engineer named Virginia Ginny Gerstenfeld After the war her engagement having fallen through she attended UCLA for doctoral studies in chemistry and while there reconnected with Heinlein As his second wife s alcoholism gradually spun out of control 26 Heinlein moved out and the couple filed for divorce Heinlein s friendship with Virginia turned into a relationship and on October 21 1948 shortly after the decree nisi came through they married in the town of Raton New Mexico shortly after setting up housekeeping in the Broadmoor district of Colorado Springs in a house that Heinlein and his wife both engineers designed As the area was newly developed they were allowed to choose their own house number 1776 Mesa Avenue 27 The design of the house was featured in Popular Mechanics 28 They remained married until Heinlein s death In 1965 after various chronic health problems of Virginia s were traced back to altitude sickness they moved to Santa Cruz California which is at sea level Robert and Virginia designed and built a new residence circular in shape in the adjacent village of Bonny Doon 29 30 Robert and Virginia Heinlein in Tahiti 1980 Ginny undoubtedly served as a model for many of his intelligent fiercely independent female characters 31 32 She was a chemist and rocket test engineer and held a higher rank in the Navy than Heinlein himself She was also an accomplished college athlete earning four letters 1 In 1953 1954 the Heinleins voyaged around the world mostly via ocean liners and cargo liners as Ginny detested flying which Heinlein described in Tramp Royale and which also provided background material for science fiction novels set aboard spaceships on long voyages such as Podkayne of Mars Friday and Job A Comedy of Justice the latter initially being set on a cruise much as detailed in Tramp Royale Ginny acted as the first reader of his manuscripts Isaac Asimov believed that Heinlein made a swing to the right politically at the same time he married Ginny California Edit In 1934 Heinlein was discharged from the Navy owing to pulmonary tuberculosis During a lengthy hospitalization and inspired by his own experience while bed ridden he developed a design for a waterbed 33 After his discharge Heinlein attended a few weeks of graduate classes in mathematics and physics at the University of California Los Angeles UCLA but he soon quit either because of his ill health or because of a desire to enter politics 34 Heinlein supported himself at several occupations including real estate sales and silver mining but for some years found money in short supply Heinlein was active in Upton Sinclair s socialist End Poverty in California movement EPIC in the early 1930s He was deputy publisher of the EPIC News which Heinlein noted recalled a mayor kicked out a district attorney replaced the governor with one of our choice 35 When Sinclair gained the Democratic nomination for Governor of California in 1934 Heinlein worked actively in the campaign Heinlein himself ran for the California State Assembly in 1938 but was unsuccessful Heinlein was running as a left wing Democrat in a conservative district and he never made it past the Democratic primary 36 Author Edit Robert A Heinlein L Sprague de Camp and Isaac Asimov Philadelphia Navy Yard 1944 While not destitute after the campaign he had a small disability pension from the Navy Heinlein turned to writing to pay off his mortgage His first published story Life Line was printed in the August 1939 issue of Astounding Science Fiction 37 Originally written for a contest he sold it to Astounding for significantly more than the contest s first prize payoff Another Future History story Misfit followed in November 37 Some saw Heinlein s talent and stardom from his first story 38 and he was quickly acknowledged as a leader of the new movement toward social science fiction In California he hosted the Manana Literary Society a 1940 41 series of informal gatherings of new authors 39 He was the guest of honor at Denvention the 1941 Worldcon held in Denver During World War II Heinlein was employed by the Navy as a civilian aeronautical engineer at the Navy Aircraft Materials Center at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in Pennsylvania 40 Heinlein recruited Isaac Asimov and L Sprague de Camp to also work there 33 While at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyards Asimov Heinlein and de Camp brainstormed unconventional approaches to kamikaze attacks such as using sound to detect approaching planes 41 As the war wound down in 1945 Heinlein began to re evaluate his career The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki along with the outbreak of the Cold War galvanized him to write nonfiction on political topics In addition he wanted to break into better paying markets He published four influential short stories for The Saturday Evening Post magazine leading off in February 1947 with The Green Hills of Earth That made him the first science fiction writer to break out of the pulp ghetto In 1950 the movie Destination Moon the documentary like film for which he had written the story and scenario co written the script and invented many of the effects won an Academy Award for special effects Also he embarked on a series of juvenile novels for the Charles Scribner s Sons publishing company that went from 1947 through 1959 at the rate of one book each autumn in time for Christmas presents to teenagers He also wrote for Boys Life in 1952 Heinlein had used topical materials throughout his juvenile series beginning in 1947 but in 1958 he interrupted work on The Heretic the working title of Stranger in a Strange Land to write and publish a book exploring ideas of civic virtue initially serialized as Starship Soldiers In 1959 his novel now entitled Starship Troopers was considered by the editors and owners of Scribner s to be too controversial for one of its prestige lines and it was rejected 42 Heinlein found another publisher Putnam feeling himself released from the constraints of writing novels for children He had told an interviewer that he did not want to do stories that merely added to categories defined by other works Rather he wanted to do his own work stating that I want to do my own stuff my own way 43 He would go on to write a series of challenging books that redrew the boundaries of science fiction including Stranger in a Strange Land 1961 and The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress 1966 Later life and death Edit Beginning in 1970 Heinlein had a series of health crises broken by strenuous periods of activity in his hobby of stonemasonry in a private correspondence he referred to that as his usual and favorite occupation between books 44 The decade began with a life threatening attack of peritonitis recovery from which required more than two years and treatment of which required multiple transfusions of Heinlein s rare blood type A2 negative citation needed As soon as he was well enough to write again he began work on Time Enough for Love 1973 which introduced many of the themes found in his later fiction In the mid 1970s Heinlein wrote two articles for the Britannica Compton Yearbook 45 He and Ginny crisscrossed the country helping to reorganize blood donation in the United States in an effort to assist the system which had saved his life citation needed At science fiction conventions to receive his autograph fans would be asked to co sign with Heinlein a beautifully embellished pledge form he supplied stating that the recipient agrees that they will donate blood He was the guest of honor at the Worldcon in 1976 for the third time at MidAmeriCon in Kansas City Missouri At that Worldcon Heinlein hosted a blood drive and donors reception to thank all those who had helped save lives Beginning in 1977 and including an episode while vacationing in Tahiti in early 1978 he had episodes of reversible neurologic dysfunction due to transient ischemic attacks 46 Over the next few months he became more and more exhausted and his health again began to decline The problem was determined to be a blocked carotid artery and he had one of the earliest known carotid bypass operations to correct it Heinlein and Virginia had been smokers 47 and smoking appears often in his fiction as do fictitious strikable self lighting cigarettes 48 In 1980 Robert Heinlein was a member of the Citizens Advisory Council on National Space Policy chaired by Jerry Pournelle which met at the home of SF writer Larry Niven to write space policy papers for the incoming Reagan administration Members included such aerospace industry leaders as former astronaut Buzz Aldrin General Daniel O Graham aerospace engineer Max Hunter and North American Rockwell VP for Space Shuttle development George Merrick Policy recommendations from the Council included ballistic missile defense concepts which were later transformed into what was called the Strategic Defense Initiative Heinlein assisted with Council contribution to the Reagan SDI spring 1983 speech Asked to appear before a Joint Committee of the United States Congress that year he testified on his belief that spin offs from space technology were benefiting the infirm and the elderly Heinlein s surgical treatment re energized him and he wrote five novels from 1980 until he died in his sleep from emphysema and heart failure on May 8 1988 At that time he had been putting together the early notes for another World as Myth novel Several of his other works have been published posthumously Based on an outline and notes created by Heinlein in 1955 Spider Robinson wrote the novel Variable Star 49 Heinlein s posthumously published nonfiction includes a selection of correspondence and notes edited into a somewhat autobiographical examination of his career published in 1989 under the title Grumbles from the Grave by his wife Virginia his book on practical politics written in 1946 published as Take Back Your Government and a travelogue of their first around the world tour in 1954 Tramp Royale The novels Podkayne of Mars and Red Planet which were edited against his wishes in their original release have been reissued in restored editions Stranger In a Strange Land was originally published in a shorter form but both the long and short versions are now simultaneously available in print Heinlein s archive is housed by the Special Collections department of McHenry Library at the University of California at Santa Cruz The collection includes manuscript drafts correspondence photographs and artifacts A substantial portion of the archive has been digitized and it is available online through the Robert A and Virginia Heinlein Archives 50 Written works EditMain article Robert A Heinlein bibliography Heinlein published 32 novels 59 short stories and 16 collections during his life Nine films two television series several episodes of a radio series and a board game have been derived more or less directly from his work He wrote a screenplay for one of the films Heinlein edited an anthology of other writers SF short stories Three nonfiction books and two poems have been published posthumously For Us the Living A Comedy of Customs was published posthumously in 2003 51 Variable Star written by Spider Robinson based on an extensive outline by Heinlein was published in September 2006 Four collections have been published posthumously 37 Series Edit Over the course of his career Heinlein wrote three somewhat overlapping series Future History series Lazarus Long series The Heinlein juvenilesEarly work 1939 1958 Edit Heinlein began his career as a writer of stories for Astounding Science Fiction magazine which was edited by John Campbell The science fiction writer Frederik Pohl has described Heinlein as that greatest of Campbell era sf writers 52 Isaac Asimov said that from the time of his first story the science fiction world accepted that Heinlein was the best science fiction writer in existence adding that he would hold this title through his lifetime 53 Alexei and Cory Panshin noted that Heinlein s impact was immediately felt In 1940 the year after selling Life Line to Campbell he wrote three short novels four novelettes and seven short stories They went on to say that No one ever dominated the science fiction field as Bob did in the first few years of his career 54 Alexei expresses awe in Heinlein s ability to show readers a world so drastically different from the one we live in now yet have so many similarities He says that We find ourselves not only in a world other than our own but identifying with a living breathing individual who is operating within its context and thinking and acting according to its terms 55 Heinlein s 1942 novel Beyond This Horizon was reprinted in Two Complete Science Adventure Books in 1952 appearing under the Anson McDonald byline even though the book edition had been published under Heinlein s own name four years earlier The opening installment of The Puppet Masters took the cover of the September 1951 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction The first novel that Heinlein wrote For Us the Living A Comedy of Customs 1939 did not see print during his lifetime but Robert James tracked down the manuscript and it was published in 2003 Though some regard it as a failure as a novel 18 considering it little more than a disguised lecture on Heinlein s social theories some readers took a very different view In a review of it John Clute wrote I m not about to suggest that if Heinlein had been able to publish such works openly in the pages of Astounding in 1939 SF would have gotten the future right I would suggest however that if Heinlein and his colleagues had been able to publish adult SF in Astounding and its fellow journals then SF might not have done such a grotesquely poor job of prefiguring something of the flavor of actually living here at the onset of 2004 56 For Us the Living was intriguing as a window into the development of Heinlein s radical ideas about man as a social animal including his interest in free love The root of many themes found in his later stories can be found in this book It also contained a large amount of material that could be considered background for his other novels This included a detailed description of the protagonist s treatment to avoid being banished to Coventry a lawless land in the Heinlein mythos where unrepentant law breakers are exiled 57 Heinlein as depicted in Amazing Stories in 1953 It appears that Heinlein at least attempted to live in a manner consistent with these ideals even in the 1930s and had an open relationship in his marriage to his second wife Leslyn He was also a nudist 3 nudism and body taboos are frequently discussed in his work At the height of the Cold War he built a bomb shelter under his house like the one featured in Farnham s Freehold 3 After For Us the Living Heinlein began selling to magazines first short stories then novels set in a Future History complete with a time line of significant political cultural and technological changes A chart of the future history was published in the May 1941 issue of Astounding Over time Heinlein wrote many novels and short stories that deviated freely from the Future History on some points while maintaining consistency in some other areas The Future History was eventually overtaken by actual events These discrepancies were explained after a fashion in his later World as Myth stories Heinlein s first novel published as a book Rocket Ship Galileo was initially rejected because going to the moon was considered too far fetched but he soon found a publisher Scribner s that began publishing a Heinlein juvenile once a year for the Christmas season 58 Eight of these books were illustrated by Clifford Geary in a distinctive white on black scratchboard style 59 Some representative novels of this type are Have Space Suit Will Travel Farmer in the Sky and Starman Jones Many of these were first published in serial form under other titles e g Farmer in the Sky was published as Satellite Scout in the Boy Scout magazine Boys Life There has been speculation that Heinlein s intense obsession with his privacy was due at least in part to the apparent contradiction between his unconventional private life clarification needed and his career as an author of books for children However For Us the Living explicitly discusses the political importance Heinlein attached to privacy as a matter of principle 60 The novels that Heinlein wrote for a young audience are commonly called the Heinlein juveniles and they feature a mixture of adolescent and adult themes Many of the issues that he takes on in these books have to do with the kinds of problems that adolescents experience His protagonists are usually intelligent teenagers who have to make their way in the adult society they see around them On the surface they are simple tales of adventure achievement and dealing with stupid teachers and jealous peers Heinlein was a vocal proponent of the notion that juvenile readers were far more sophisticated and able to handle more complex or difficult themes than most people realized His juvenile stories often had a maturity to them that made them readable for adults Red Planet for example portrays some subversive themes including a revolution in which young students are involved his editor demanded substantial changes in this book s discussion of topics such as the use of weapons by children and the misidentified sex of the Martian character Heinlein was always aware of the editorial limitations put in place by the editors of his novels and stories and while he observed those restrictions on the surface was often successful in introducing ideas not often seen in other authors juvenile SF In 1957 James Blish wrote that one reason for Heinlein s success has been the high grade of machinery which goes today as always into his story telling Heinlein seems to have known from the beginning as if instinctively technical lessons about fiction which other writers must learn the hard way or often enough never learn He does not always operate the machinery to the best advantage but he always seems to be aware of it 61 The 1972 collection Myths and Modern Man noted It is strange how among all the justified praise heaped upon Heinlein what should have counted as one of the most brilliant successes of his entire career is very much overlooked I talk of course about the 1940 story Solution Unsatisfactory At the time when the Second World War just got seriously going the United States and Soviet Union had not yet become directly involved and the world s attention was riveted on the unfolding Battle of Britain Heinlein was four or five steps ahead of everybody More than a year before Roosevelt authorized the Manhattan Project Heinlein correctly foresaw that a The President of the US would initiate a secret project to develop nuclear weapons and employ scientist refugees from Nazi Europe b By 1945 the US would have a weapon able to destroy an entire city in one blow from a single airplane and would use that weapon to end to war c That with the US having thus won the war the world would become aware of the realities of a nuclear arms race without using the term Heinlein predicted and described in detail the doctrine of Mutual Assured Destruction and d Concretely the main issue on the agenda in the post 1945 years would be whether the Soviet Union would obtain nuclear arms and if it did would the Soviets try to launch a surprise nuclear attack on the United States For having predicted all that in 1940 even to accurately predicting the remorse and guilt feeling of the scientists involved Heinlein deserves much plaudits In my view this should have counted for than the Future History which is entertaining but widely off the mark as well future history 62 1959 1960 Edit Heinlein decisively ended his juvenile novels with Starship Troopers 1959 a controversial work and his personal riposte to leftists calling for President Dwight D Eisenhower to stop nuclear testing in 1958 The Patrick Henry ad shocked em he wrote many years later Starship Troopers outraged em 63 Starship Troopers is a coming of age story about duty citizenship and the role of the military in society 64 The book portrays a society in which suffrage is earned by demonstrated willingness to place society s interests before one s own at least for a short time and often under onerous circumstances in government service in the case of the protagonist this was military service Later in Expanded Universe Heinlein said that it was his intention in the novel that service could include positions outside strictly military functions such as teachers police officers and other government positions This is presented in the novel as an outgrowth of the failure of unearned suffrage government and as a very successful arrangement In addition the franchise was only awarded after leaving the assigned service thus those serving their terms in the military or any other service were excluded from exercising any franchise Career military were completely disenfranchised until retirement The name Starship Troopers was licensed for an unrelated B movie script called Bug Hunt at Outpost Nine which was then retitled to benefit from the book s credibility 65 The resulting film entitled Starship Troopers 1997 which was written by Ed Neumeier and directed by Paul Verhoeven had little relationship to the book beyond the inclusion of character names the depiction of space marines and the concept of suffrage earned by military service Fans of Heinlein were critical of the movie which they considered a betrayal of Heinlein s philosophy presenting the society in which the story takes place as fascist 66 Likewise the powered armor technology that is not only central to the book but became a standard subgenre of science fiction thereafter is completely absent in the movie where the characters use World War II technology weapons and wear light combat gear little more advanced than that 67 Verhoeven commented that he had tried to read the book after he had bought the rights to it in order to add it to his existing movie However he read only the first two chapters finding it too boring to continue He thought it was a bad book and asked Ed Neumeier to tell him the story because he could not read it 68 Middle period work 1961 1973 Edit Heinlein s novel Podkayne of Mars was serialized in If with a cover by Virgil Finlay From about 1961 Stranger in a Strange Land to 1973 Time Enough for Love Heinlein explored some of his most important themes such as individualism libertarianism and free expression of physical and emotional love Three novels from this period Stranger in a Strange Land The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress and Time Enough for Love won the Libertarian Futurist Society s Prometheus Hall of Fame Award designed to honor classic libertarian fiction 69 Jeff Riggenbach described The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress as unquestionably one of the three or four most influential libertarian novels of the last century 70 Heinlein did not publish Stranger in a Strange Land until some time after it was written and the themes of free love and radical individualism are prominently featured in his long unpublished first novel For Us the Living A Comedy of Customs The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress tells of a war of independence waged by the Lunar penal colonies with significant comments from a major character Professor La Paz regarding the threat posed by government to individual freedom Although Heinlein had previously written a few short stories in the fantasy genre during this period he wrote his first fantasy novel Glory Road In Stranger in a Strange Land and I Will Fear No Evil he began to mix hard science with fantasy mysticism and satire of organized religion Critics William H Patterson Jr and Andrew Thornton believe that this is simply an expression of Heinlein s longstanding philosophical opposition to positivism 71 verification needed Heinlein stated that he was influenced by James Branch Cabell in taking this new literary direction The penultimate novel of this period I Will Fear No Evil is according to critic James Gifford almost universally regarded as a literary failure 72 and he attributes its shortcomings to Heinlein s near death from peritonitis Later work 1980 1987 Edit After a seven year hiatus brought on by poor health Heinlein produced five new novels in the period from 1980 The Number of the Beast to 1987 To Sail Beyond the Sunset These books have a thread of common characters and time and place They most explicitly communicated Heinlein s philosophies and beliefs and many long didactic passages of dialog and exposition deal with government sex and religion These novels are controversial among his readers and one critic David Langford has written about them very negatively 73 Heinlein s four Hugo awards were all for books written before this period Most of the novels from this period are recognized by critics as forming an offshoot from the Future History series and are referred to by the term World as Myth 74 The tendency toward authorial self reference begun in Stranger in a Strange Land and Time Enough for Love becomes even more evident in novels such as The Cat Who Walks Through Walls whose first person protagonist is a disabled military veteran who becomes a writer and finds love with a female character 75 The 1982 novel Friday a more conventional adventure story borrowing a character and backstory from the earlier short story Gulf also containing suggestions of connection to The Puppet Masters continued a Heinlein theme of expecting what he saw as the continued disintegration of Earth s society to the point where the title character is strongly encouraged to seek a new life off planet It concludes with a traditional Heinlein note as in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress or Time Enough for Love that freedom is to be found on the frontiers The 1984 novel Job A Comedy of Justice is a sharp satire of organized religion Heinlein himself was agnostic 76 77 Posthumous publications Edit Several Heinlein works have been published since his death including the aforementioned For Us the Living as well as 1989 s Grumbles from the Grave a collection of letters between Heinlein and his editors and agent 1992 s Tramp Royale a travelogue of a southern hemisphere tour the Heinleins took in the 1950s Take Back Your Government a how to book about participatory democracy written in 1946 and reflecting his experience as an organizer with the EPIC campaign of 1934 and the movement s aftermath as an important factor in California politics before the Second World War and a tribute volume called Requiem Collected Works and Tributes to the Grand Master containing some additional short works previously unpublished in book form Off the Main Sequence published in 2005 includes three short stories never before collected in any Heinlein book Heinlein called them stinkeroos Spider Robinson a colleague friend and admirer of Heinlein 78 wrote Variable Star based on an outline and notes for a novel that Heinlein prepared in 1955 The novel was published as a collaboration with Heinlein s name above Robinson s on the cover in 2006 A complete collection of Heinlein s published work has been published 79 by the Heinlein Prize Trust as the Virginia Edition after his wife See the Complete Works section of Robert A Heinlein bibliography for details On February 1 2019 Phoenix Pick announced that through a collaboration with the Heinlein Prize Trust a reconstruction of the full text of an unpublished Heinlein novel had been produced It was published in March 2020 The reconstructed novel entitled The Pursuit of the Pankera A Parallel Novel about Parallel Universes 80 is an alternative version of The Number of the Beast with the first one third of The Pursuit of the Pankera mostly the same as the first one third of The Number of the Beast but the remainder of The Pursuit of the Pankera deviating entirely from The Number of the Beast with a completely different story line The newly reconstructed novel pays homage to Edgar Rice Burroughs and E E Doc Smith It was edited by Patrick Lobrutto Some reviewers describe the newly reconstructed novel as more in line with the style of a traditional Heinlein novel than was The Number of the Beast 81 The Pursuit of the Pankera was considered superior to the original version of The Number of the Beast by some reviewers 82 Both The Pursuit of the Pankera and a new edition of The Number of the Beast 83 were published in March 2020 The new edition of the latter shares the subtitle of The Pursuit of the Pankera hence entitled The Number of the Beast A Parallel Novel about Parallel Universes 84 85 Movies EditMain article Robert A Heinlein bibliography Heinlein contributed to the final draft of the script for Destination Moon 1950 and served as a technical adviser for the film 86 Heinlein also shared screenwriting credit for Project Moonbase 1953 Influences EditThe primary influence on Heinlein s writing style may have been Rudyard Kipling Kipling is the first known modern example of indirect exposition a writing technique for which Heinlein later became famous 87 In his famous text on On the Writing of Speculative Fiction Heinlein quotes Kipling There are nine and sixty ways Of constructing tribal lays And every single one of them is right Stranger in a Strange Land originated as a modernized version of Kipling s The Jungle Book His wife suggested that the child be raised by Martians instead of wolves Likewise Citizen of the Galaxy can be seen as a reboot of Kipling s novel Kim 88 The Starship Troopers idea of needing to serve in the military in order to vote can be found in Kipling s The Army of a Dream But as a little detail we never mention if we don t volunteer in some corps or other as combatants if we re fit as non combatants if we ain t till we re thirty five we don t vote and we don t get poor relief and the women don t love us Poul Anderson once said of Kipling s science fiction story As Easy as A B C a wonderful science fiction yarn showing the same eye for detail that would later distinguish the work of Robert Heinlein Heinlein described himself as also being influenced by George Bernard Shaw having read most of his plays 89 Shaw is an example of an earlier author who used the competent man a favorite Heinlein archetype 90 He denied though any direct influence of Back to Methuselah on Methuselah s Children Views Edit Heinlein c 1953 Heinlein s books probe a range of ideas about a range of topics such as sex race politics and the military Many were seen as radical or as ahead of their time in their social criticism His books have inspired considerable debate about the specifics and the evolution of Heinlein s own opinions and have earned him both lavish praise and a degree of criticism He has also been accused of contradicting himself on various philosophical questions 91 Brian Doherty cites William Patterson saying that the best way to gain an understanding of Heinlein is as a full service iconoclast the unique individual who decides that things do not have to be and won t continue as they are He says this vision is at the heart of Heinlein science fiction libertarianism and America Heinlein imagined how everything about the human world from our sexual mores to our religion to our automobiles to our government to our plans for cultural survival might be flawed even fatally so 92 The critic Elizabeth Anne Hull for her part has praised Heinlein for his interest in exploring fundamental life questions especially questions about political power our responsibilities to one another and about personal freedom particularly sexual freedom 93 Edward R Murrow hosted a series on CBS Radio called This I Believe which solicited an entry from Heinlein in 1952 Titled Our Noble Essential Decency it is probably the most enduring and popular entry citation needed In it Heinlein broke with the normal trends stating that he believed in his neighbors some of whom he named and described community and towns across America that share the same sense of good will and intentions as his own going on to apply this same philosophy to the US and humanity in general I believe in my fellow citizens Our headlines are splashed with crime Yet for every criminal there are ten thousand honest decent kindly men If it were not so no child would live to grow up Business could not go on from day to day Decency is not news It is buried in the obituaries but it is a force stronger than crime Politics Edit Heinlein s political positions shifted throughout his life Heinlein s early political leanings were liberal 94 In 1934 he worked actively for the Democratic campaign of Upton Sinclair for Governor of California After Sinclair lost Heinlein became an anti Communist Democratic activist He made an unsuccessful bid for a California State Assembly seat in 1938 94 Heinlein s first novel For Us the Living written 1939 consists largely of speeches advocating the Social Credit philosophy and the early story Misfit 1939 deals with an organization The Cosmic Construction Corps that seems to be Franklin D Roosevelt s Civilian Conservation Corps translated into outer space 95 Of this time in his life Heinlein later said At the time I wrote Methuselah s Children I was still politically quite naive and still had hopes that various libertarian notions could be put over by political processes It now seems to me that every time we manage to establish one freedom they take another one away Maybe two And that seems to me characteristic of a society as it gets older and more crowded and higher taxes and more laws 89 Heinlein s fiction of the 1940s and 1950s however began to espouse conservative views After 1945 he came to believe that a strong world government was the only way to avoid mutual nuclear annihilation citation needed His 1949 novel Space Cadet describes a future scenario where a military controlled global government enforces world peace Heinlein ceased considering himself a Democrat in 1954 94 The Heinleins formed the Patrick Henry League in 1958 and they worked in the 1964 Barry Goldwater presidential campaign 25 When Robert A Heinlein opened his Colorado Springs newspaper on April 5 1958 he read a full page ad demanding that the Eisenhower Administration stop testing nuclear weapons The science fiction author was flabbergasted He called for the formation of the Patrick Henry League and spent the next several weeks writing and publishing his own polemic that lambasted Communist line goals concealed in idealistic sounding nonsense and urged Americans not to become soft headed 63 Heinlein s response ad was entitled Who Are the Heirs of Patrick Henry It started with the famous Henry quotation Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery Forbid it Almighty God I know not what course others may take but as for me give me liberty or give me death It then went on to admit that there was some risk to nuclear testing albeit less than the willfully distorted claims of the test ban advocates and risk of nuclear war but that The alternative is surrender We accept the risks Heinlein was among those who in 1968 signed a pro Vietnam War ad in Galaxy Science Fiction 96 Heinlein always considered himself a libertarian in a letter to Judith Merril in 1967 never sent he said As for libertarian I ve been one all my life a radical one You might use the term philosophical anarchist or autarchist about me but libertarian is easier to define and fits well enough 97 Stranger in a Strange Land was embraced by the 1960s counterculture and libertarians have found inspiration in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress Both groups found resonance with his themes of personal freedom in both thought and action 70 Race Edit Heinlein grew up in the era of racial segregation in the United States and wrote some of his most influential fiction at the height of the Civil Rights Movement He explicitly made the case for using his fiction not only to predict the future but also to educate his readers about the value of racial equality and the importance of racial tolerance 98 His early novels were very much ahead of their time both in their explicit rejection of racism and in their inclusion of protagonists of color In the context of science fiction before the 1960s the mere existence of characters of color was a remarkable novelty with green occurring more often than brown 99 For example his 1948 novel Space Cadet explicitly uses aliens as a metaphor for minorities In his novel The Star Beast the de facto foreign minister of the Terran government is an undersecretary a Mr Kiku who is from Africa 100 Heinlein explicitly states his skin is ebony black and that Kiku is in an arranged marriage that is happy 101 In a number of his stories Heinlein challenges his readers possible racial preconceptions by introducing a strong sympathetic character only to reveal much later that he or she is of African or other ancestry In several cases the covers of the books show characters as being light skinned when the text states or at least implies that they are dark skinned or of African ancestry 104 Heinlein repeatedly denounced racism in his nonfiction works including numerous examples in Expanded Universe Heinlein reveals in Starship Troopers that the novel s protagonist and narrator Johnny Rico the formerly disaffected scion of a wealthy family is Filipino actually named Juan Rico and speaks Tagalog in addition to English Race was a central theme in some of Heinlein s fiction The most prominent example is Farnham s Freehold which casts a white family into a future in which white people are the slaves of cannibalistic black rulers In the 1941 novel Sixth Column also known as The Day After Tomorrow a white resistance movement in the United States defends itself against an invasion by an Asian fascist state the Pan Asians using a super science technology that allows ray weapons to be tuned to specific races The book is sprinkled with racist slurs against Asian people and black and Hispanic people are not mentioned at all The idea for the story was pushed on Heinlein by editor John W Campbell and the story itself was based on a then unpublished story by Campbell and Heinlein wrote later that he had had to re slant it to remove racist aspects of the original story line and that he did not consider it to be an artistic success 105 106 However the novel prompted a heated debate in the scientific community regarding the plausibility of developing ethnic bioweapons 107 John Hickman writing in the European Journal of American Studies identifies examples of anti East Asian racism in some of Heinlein s works particularly Sixth Column 108 Heinlein summed up his attitude toward people of any race in his essay Our Noble Essential Decency thus And finally I believe in my whole race yellow white black red brown in the honesty courage intelligence durability and goodness of the overwhelming majority of my brothers and sisters everywhere on this planet I am proud to be a human being Individualism and self determination Edit In keeping with his belief in individualism his work for adults and sometimes even his work for juveniles often portrays both the oppressors and the oppressed with considerable ambiguity Heinlein believed that individualism was incompatible with ignorance He believed that an appropriate level of adult competence was achieved through a wide ranging education whether this occurred in a classroom or not In his juvenile novels more than once a character looks with disdain at a student s choice of classwork saying Why didn t you study something useful 109 In Time Enough for Love Lazarus Long gives a long list of capabilities that anyone should have concluding Specialization is for insects The ability of the individual to create himself is explored in stories such as I Will Fear No Evil All You Zombies and By His Bootstraps Heinlein claimed to have written Starship Troopers in response to calls for the unilateral ending of nuclear testing by the United States 110 Heinlein suggests in the book that the Bugs are a good example of Communism being something that humans cannot successfully adhere to since humans are strongly defined individuals whereas the Bugs being a collective can all contribute to the whole without consideration of individual desire 111 Sexual issues Edit For Heinlein personal liberation included sexual liberation and free love was a major subject of his writing starting in 1939 with For Us the Living During his early period Heinlein s writing for younger readers needed to take account of both editorial perceptions of sexuality in his novels and potential perceptions among the buying public as critic William H Patterson has put it his dilemma was to sort out what was really objectionable from what was only excessive over sensitivity to imaginary librarians 112 By his middle period sexual freedom and the elimination of sexual jealousy became a major theme for instance in Stranger in a Strange Land 1961 the progressively minded but sexually conservative reporter Ben Caxton acts as a dramatic foil for the less parochial characters Jubal Harshaw and Valentine Michael Smith Mike Another of the main characters Jill is homophobic and says that nine times out of ten if a girl gets raped it s partly her own fault 113 According to Gary Westfahl Heinlein is a problematic case for feminists on the one hand his works often feature strong female characters and vigorous statements that women are equal to or even superior to men but these characters and statements often reflect hopelessly stereotypical attitudes about typical female attributes It is disconcerting for example that in Expanded Universe Heinlein calls for a society where all lawyers and politicians are women essentially on the grounds that they possess a mysterious feminine practicality that men cannot duplicate 114 In books written as early as 1956 Heinlein dealt with incest and the sexual nature of children Many of his books including Time for the Stars Glory Road Time Enough for Love and The Number of the Beast dealt explicitly or implicitly with incest sexual feelings and relations between adults children or both 115 The treatment of these themes include the romantic relationship and eventual marriage of two characters in The Door into Summer who met when one was a 30 year old engineer and the other was an 11 year old girl and who eventually married when time travel rendered the girl an adult while the engineer aged minimally or the more overt intra familial incest in To Sail Beyond the Sunset and Farnham s Freehold Heinlein often posed situations where the nominal purpose of sexual taboos was irrelevant to a particular situation due to future advances in technology For example in Time Enough for Love Heinlein describes a brother and sister Joe and Llita who were mirror twins being complementary diploids with entirely disjoint genomes and thus not at increased risk for unfavorable gene duplication due to consanguinity In this instance Llita and Joe were props used to explore the concept of incest where the usual objection to incest heightened risk of genetic defect in their children was not a consideration 116 Peers such as L Sprague de Camp and Damon Knight have commented critically on Heinlein s portrayal of incest and pedophilia in a lighthearted and even approving manner 115 Diane Parkin Speer suggests that Heinlein s intent seems more to provoke the reader and to question sexual norms than to promote any particular sexual agenda 117 Philosophy Edit In To Sail Beyond the Sunset Heinlein has the main character Maureen state that the purpose of metaphysics is to ask questions Why are we here Where are we going after we die and so on and that you are not allowed to answer the questions Asking the questions is the point of metaphysics but answering them is not because once you answer this kind of question you cross the line into religion Maureen does not state a reason for this she simply remarks that such questions are beautiful but lack answers Maureen s son lover Lazarus Long makes a related remark in Time Enough for Love In order for us to answer the big questions about the universe Lazarus states at one point it would be necessary to stand outside the universe During the 1930s and 1940s Heinlein was deeply interested in Alfred Korzybski s general semantics and attended a number of seminars on the subject His views on epistemology seem to have flowed from that interest and his fictional characters continue to express Korzybskian views to the very end of his writing career Many of his stories such as Gulf If This Goes On and Stranger in a Strange Land depend strongly on the premise related to the well known Sapir Whorf hypothesis that by using a correctly designed language one can change or improve oneself mentally or even realize untapped potential as in the case of Joe in Gulf whose last name may be Greene Gilead or Briggs 118 When Ayn Rand s novel The Fountainhead was published Heinlein was very favorably impressed as quoted in Grumbles and mentioned John Galt the hero in Rand s Atlas Shrugged as a heroic archetype in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress He was also strongly affected by the religious philosopher P D Ouspensky 18 Freudianism and psychoanalysis were at the height of their influence during the peak of Heinlein s career and stories such as Time for the Stars indulged in psychological theorizing However he was skeptical about Freudianism especially after a struggle with an editor who insisted on reading Freudian sexual symbolism into his juvenile novels Heinlein was fascinated by the social credit movement in the 1930s This is shown in Beyond This Horizon and in his 1938 novel For Us the Living A Comedy of Customs which was finally published in 2003 long after his death Pay it forward Edit On that theme the phrase pay it forward though it was already in occasional use as a quotation was popularized by Robert A Heinlein in his book Between Planets 119 published in 1951 The banker reached into the folds of his gown pulled out a single credit note But eat first a full belly steadies the judgment Do me the honor of accepting this as our welcome to the newcomer His pride said no his stomach said YES Don took it and said Uh thanks That s awfully kind of you I ll pay it back first chance Instead pay it forward to some other brother who needs it He referred to this in a number of other stories although sometimes just saying to pay a debt back by helping others as in one of his last works Job a Comedy of Justice Heinlein was a mentor to Ray Bradbury giving him help and quite possibly passing on the concept made famous by the publication of a letter from him to Heinlein thanking him 120 In Bradbury s novel Dandelion Wine published in 1957 when the main character Douglas Spaulding is reflecting on his life being saved by Mr Jonas the Junkman How do I thank Mr Jonas he wondered for what he s done How do I thank him how pay him back No way no way at all You just can t pay What then What Pass it on somehow he thought pass it on to someone else Keep the chain moving Look around find someone and pass it on That was the only way Bradbury has also advised that writers he has helped thank him by helping other writers 121 Heinlein both preached and practiced this philosophy now the Heinlein Society a humanitarian organization founded in his name does so attributing the philosophy to its various efforts including Heinlein for Heroes the Heinlein Society Scholarship Program and Heinlein Society blood drives 122 Author Spider Robinson made repeated reference to the doctrine attributing it to his spiritual mentor Heinlein 123 Influence and legacy EditHonorifics Edit Heinlein is usually identified along with Isaac Asimov and Arthur C Clarke as one of the three masters of science fiction to arise in the so called Golden Age of science fiction associated with John W Campbell and his magazine Astounding 124 In the 1950s he was a leader in bringing science fiction out of the low paying and less prestigious pulp ghetto Most of his works including short stories have been continuously in print in many languages since their initial appearance and are still available as new paperbacks decades after his death Heinlein crater on Mars He was at the top of his form during and himself helped to initiate the trend toward social science fiction which went along with a general maturing of the genre away from space opera to a more literary approach touching on such adult issues as politics and human sexuality In reaction to this trend hard science fiction began to be distinguished as a separate subgenre but paradoxically Heinlein is also considered a seminal figure in hard science fiction due to his extensive knowledge of engineering and the careful scientific research demonstrated in his stories Heinlein himself stated with obvious pride that in the days before pocket calculators he and his wife Virginia once worked for several days on a mathematical equation describing an Earth Mars rocket orbit which was then subsumed in a single sentence of the novel Space Cadet Writing style Edit Heinlein is often credited with bringing serious writing techniques to the genre of science fiction For example when writing about fictional worlds previous authors were often limited by the reader s existing knowledge of a typical space opera setting leading to a relatively low creativity level The same starships death rays and horrifying rubbery aliens becoming ubiquitous This was necessary unless the author was willing to go into long expositions about the setting of the story at a time when the word count was at a premium in SF But Heinlein utilized a technique called indirect exposition perhaps first introduced by Rudyard Kipling in his own science fiction venture the Aerial Board of Control stories Kipling had picked this up during his time in India using it to avoid bogging down his stories set in India with explanations for his English readers 125 This technique mentioning details in a way that lets the reader infer more about the universe than is actually spelled out 126 became a trademark rhetorical technique of both Heinlein and generation of writers influenced by him Heinlein was significantly influenced by Kipling beyond this for example quoting him in On the Writing of Speculative Fiction 127 Likewise Heinlein s name is often associated with the competent hero a character archetype who though he or she may have flaws and limitations is a strong accomplished person able to overcome any soluble problem set in their path They tend to feel confident overall have a broad life experience and set of skills and not give up when the going gets tough This style influenced not only the writing style of a generation of authors but even their personal character Harlan Ellison once said Very early in life when I read Robert Heinlein I got the thread that runs through his stories the notion of the competent man I ve always held that as my ideal I ve tried to be a very competent man 128 Rules of writing Edit See also On the Writing of Speculative Fiction When fellow writers or fans wrote Heinlein asking for writing advice he famously gave out his own list of rules for becoming a successful writer You must write Finish what you start You must refrain from rewriting except to editorial order You must put your story on the market You must keep it on the market until it has sold About which he said The above five rules really have more to do with how to write speculative fiction than anything said above them But they are amazingly hard to follow which is why there are so few professional writers and so many aspirants and which is why I am not afraid to give away the racket 129 Heinlein later published an entire article On the Writing of Speculative Fiction which included his rules and from which the above quote is taken When he says anything said above them he refers to his other guidelines For example he describes most stories as fitting into one of a handful of basic categories The gadget story The human interest story Boy meets girl The Little Tailor The man who learned betterIn the article Heinlein proposes that most stories fit into the either the gadget story or the human interest story which is itself subdivided into the three latter categories He also credits L Ron Hubbard as having identified The Man Who Learned Better Influence among writers Edit Heinlein has had a pervasive influence on other science fiction writers In a 1953 poll of leading science fiction authors he was cited more frequently as an influence than any other modern writer 130 Critic James Gifford writes that Although many other writers have exceeded Heinlein s output few can claim to match his broad and seminal influence Scores of science fiction writers from the prewar Golden Age through the present day loudly and enthusiastically credit Heinlein for blazing the trails of their own careers and shaping their styles and stories Robert A Heinlein A Reader s Companion p xiii Heinlein gave Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle extensive advice on a draft manuscript of The Mote in God s Eye 131 He contributed a cover blurb Possibly the finest science fiction novel I have ever read Writer David Gerrold responsible for creating the tribbles in Star Trek also credited Heinlein as the inspiration for his Dingilliad series of novels Gregory Benford refers to his novel Jupiter Project as a Heinlein tribute Similarly Charles Stross says his Hugo Award nominated novel Saturn s Children is a space opera and late period Robert A Heinlein tribute 132 referring to Heinlein s Friday 133 The theme and plot of Kameron Hurley s novel The Light Brigade clearly echo those of Heinlein s Starship Troopers 134 Words and phrases coined Edit Even outside the science fiction community several words and phrases coined or adopted by Heinlein have passed into common English usage Waldo protagonist in the eponymous short story Waldo whose name came to mean mechanical or robot arms in the real world that are akin to the ones used by the character in the story Moonbat 135 used in United States politics as a pejorative political epithet referring to progressives or leftists was originally the name of a space ship in his story Space Jockey Grok a Martian word for understanding a thing so fully as to become one with it from Stranger in a Strange Land whose root meaning in Martian is to drink Space marine an existing term popularized by Heinlein in short stories the concept then being made famous by Starship Troopers though the term space marine is not used in that novel Speculative fiction a term Heinlein used for the separation of serious consistent science fiction writing from the pop sci fi of the day Inspiring culture and technology Edit In 1962 Oberon Zell Ravenheart then still using his birth name Tim Zell founded the Church of All Worlds a Neopagan religious organization modeled in many ways including its name after the treatment of religion in the novel Stranger in a Strange Land This spiritual path included several ideas from the book including non mainstream family structures social libertarianism water sharing rituals an acceptance of all religious paths by a single tradition and the use of several terms such as grok Thou art God and Never Thirst Though Heinlein was neither a member nor a promoter of the Church there was a frequent exchange of correspondence between Zell and Heinlein and he was a paid subscriber to their magazine Green Egg This Church still exists as a 501 C 3 religious organization incorporated in California with membership worldwide and it remains an active part of the neopagan community today 136 Zell Ravenheart s wife Morning Glory coined the term polyamory in 1990 137 another movement that includes Heinlein concepts among its roots Heinlein was influential in making space exploration seem to the public more like a practical possibility His stories in publications such as The Saturday Evening Post took a matter of fact approach to their outer space setting rather than the gee whiz tone that had previously been common The documentary like film Destination Moon advocated a Space Race with an unspecified foreign power almost a decade before such an idea became commonplace and was promoted by an unprecedented publicity campaign in print publications Many of the astronauts and others working in the U S space program grew up on a diet of the Heinlein juveniles original research best evidenced by the naming of a crater on Mars after him and a tribute interspersed by the Apollo 15 astronauts into their radio conversations while on the moon 138 Heinlein was also a guest commentator along with fellow SF author Arthur C Clarke for Walter Cronkite s coverage of the Apollo 11 Moon landing 139 He remarked to Cronkite during the landing that This is the greatest event in human history up to this time This is today is New Year s Day of the Year One 140 Heinlein has inspired many transformational figures in business and technology including Lee Felsenstein the designer of the first mass produced portable computer 141 Marc Andreessen 142 co author of the first widely used web browser and Elon Musk CEO of Tesla and founder of SpaceX 143 Heinlein Society Edit Main article Heinlein Society The Heinlein Society was founded by Virginia Heinlein on behalf of her husband to pay forward the legacy of the writer to future generations of Heinlein s Children The foundation has programs to Promote Heinlein blood drives Provide educational materials to educators Promote scholarly research and overall discussion of the works and ideas of Robert Anson Heinlein The Heinlein society also established the Robert A Heinlein Award in 2003 for outstanding published works in science fiction and technical writings to inspire the human exploration of space 144 145 In popular culture Edit This article appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2019 Television In the 1967 Star Trek television episode The Trouble with Tribbles the title creatures in the episode resemble the Martian flat cats in Heinlein s 1952 novel The Rolling Stones Script writer David Gerrold was concerned that he had inadvertently plagiarized the novel which he had read fifteen years before 146 These concerns were brought up by a research team who suggested that the rights to the novel should be purchased from Heinlein One of the producers phoned Heinlein who only asked for a signed copy of the script and later sent a note to Gerrold after it aired to thank him for the script 147 Literature Author and Heinlein fan John Varley coined the term Heinleiner in his novels Steel Beach and The Golden Globe citation needed In the 2001 novel The Counterfeit Heinlein by Laurence M Janifer Heinlein appears indirectly as the purported author of an ancient manuscript supposedly one of his unpublished stories The Stone Pillow 148 third party source needed Music In 1971 progressive rock band Yes released a three part song called Starship Trooper on their album The Yes Album The title was taken from Heinlein s novel of a similar name Lyricist Jon Anderson said he got the idea of a Starship Trooper being another guardian angel and Mother Earth 149 150 In 1974 Jimmy Webb used the author s title The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress for his song of the same name 151 Many people have collected the various parts of the Heinlein song The Green Hills of Earth Heinlein used this trope in various stories the characters occasionally mentioning the song and even quoting lines from it clarification needed and put them to music 152 153 154 Honors Edit Orbital path of Robert Heinlein s eponymous asteroid In his lifetime Heinlein received four Hugo Awards for Double Star Starship Troopers Stranger in a Strange Land and The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress and was nominated for four Nebula Awards for The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress Friday Time Enough for Love and Job A Comedy of Justice 155 He was also given seven Retro Hugos two for best novel Beyond This Horizon and Farmer in the Sky three for best novella If This Goes On Waldo and The Man Who Sold the Moon one for best novelette The Roads Must Roll and one for best dramatic presentation Destination Moon 156 157 158 Heinlein was also nominated for six Hugo Awards for the works Have Space Suit Will Travel Glory Road Time Enough for Love Friday Job A Comedy of Justice and Grumbles from the Grave as well as six Retro Hugo Awards for Magic Inc Requiem Coventry Blowups Happen Goldfish Bowl and The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag The Science Fiction Writers of America named Heinlein its first Grand Master in 1974 presented 1975 Officers and past presidents of the Association select a living writer for lifetime achievement now annually and including fantasy literature 14 15 In 1977 he was awarded the Inkpot Award 159 Main belt asteroid 6312 Robheinlein 1990 RH4 discovered on September 14 1990 by H E Holt at Palomar was named after him 160 There is no lunar feature named explicitly for Heinlein but in 1994 the International Astronomical Union named Heinlein crater on Mars in his honor 161 162 The Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame inducted Heinlein in 1998 its third class of two deceased and two living writers and editors 163 In 2001 the United States Naval Academy created the Robert A Heinlein Chair in Aerospace Engineering 164 Heinlein was the Ghost of Honor at the 2008 World Science Fiction Convention in Denver Colorado which held several panels on his works nearly seventy years earlier he had been a Guest of Honor at the same convention 165 In 2016 after an intensive online campaign to win a vote for the opening Heinlein was inducted into the Hall of Famous Missourians 166 His bronze bust created by Kansas City sculptor E Spencer Schubert is on permanent display in the Missouri State Capitol in Jefferson City 167 The Libertarian Futurist Society has honored eight of Heinlein s novels and two short stories with their Hall of Fame award 168 The first two were given during his lifetime for The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress and Stranger in a Strange Land Five more were awarded posthumously for Red Planet Methuselah s Children Time Enough for Love and the short stories Requiem and Coventry See also Edit Biography portal Science fiction portal Children and Young Adult Literature portal Libertarianism portalRobert A Heinlein bibliography Heinlein Society Robert A Heinlein Award Heinlein Prize for Advances in Space Commercialization Heinlein Centennial Convention List of Robert A Heinlein characters The Return of William Proxmire References EditCitations Edit a b Woo Elaine January 26 2003 Virginia Heinlein 86 Wife Muse and Literary Guardian of Celebrated Science Fiction Writer Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on November 12 2016 Retrieved June 25 2017 Also reproduced at The Heinlein Society Archived December 18 2019 at the Wayback Machine Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3 ed Longman a b c d Houdek D A 2003 FAQ Frequently Asked Questions about Robert A Heinlein the person The Heinlein Society Archived from the original on April 3 2012 Retrieved January 23 2007 Say How A Pronunciation Guide to Names of Public Figures Library of Congress National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped NLS September 21 2006 Archived from the original on October 6 2019 Retrieved January 23 2007 Booker M Keith Thomas Anne Marie 2009 The Science Fiction Handbook Blackwell Guides to Literature Series John Wiley amp Sons p 155 ISBN 978 1 4051 6205 0 Archived from the original on July 5 2019 Retrieved June 27 2018 Sometimes called the dean of science fiction writers Robert A Heinlein was one of the leading figures of science fiction s Golden Age and one of the authors most responsible for establishing the science fiction novel as a publishing category Mendlesohn Farah 2019 The Pleasant Profession of Robert A Heinlein London Unbound Publishing ISBN 978 1 78352 678 9 Robert Heinlein s softer side The Guardian January 12 2009 Archived from the original on January 25 2021 Retrieved June 5 2021 The Big Three Asimov Clarke Heinlein A Bibliography SFandFantasy co uk Archived from the original on September 1 2016 Retrieved August 28 2016 Isaac Asimov Arthur C Clarke and Robert Heinlein are informally known as the Big Three the best known members of the group of authors who brought science fiction into a Golden Age in the middle years of the twentieth century Parrinder Patrick 2001 Learning from Other Worlds Estrangement Cognition and the Politics of Science Fiction and Utopia Duke University Press p 81 ISBN 978 0 8223 2773 8 This short discussion of Asimov Clarke and Heinlein the so called Big Three who largely dominated American and to a lesser extent Anglo American science fiction during the 1940s the 1950s and well into the 1960s should serve to suggest the particularly complex affinity between science fiction and critical theory in its Blochian version Science Fiction Writer Robert J Sawyer The Death of Science Fiction SF writer Archived from the original on May 2 2012 Retrieved November 26 2017 And yet the publishers do whatever they can to continue to milk the big three Asimov Clarke and Heinlein 15 Things You Might Not Know About Stranger in a Strange Land Mental floss July 14 2015 Archived from the original on April 14 2017 Retrieved November 26 2017 a b c Was Robert A Heinlein a Libertarian Mises Institute May 18 2010 Archived from the original on December 11 2019 Retrieved May 5 2017 Lord M G October 2 2005 Heinlein s Female Troubles The New York Times Archived from the original on February 13 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 a b Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master Archived July 1 2011 at the Wayback Machine Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America SFWA Retrieved March 23 2013 a b Robert A Heinlein Awards Science Fiction Awards Database Locus Science Fiction Foundation Archived from the original on December 18 2019 Retrieved December 18 2019 Robert A Heinlein s technological prophecies Tor August 17 2010 Archived from the original on May 2 2015 Retrieved November 26 2017 Patterson William 2010 Appendix 2 Robert A Heinlein 1907 1948 learning curve New York Tom Doherty Associates ISBN 978 0 7653 1960 9 Retrieved June 29 2014 a b c William H Patterson Jr 1999 Robert A Heinlein a Biographical Sketch The Heinlein Journal 1999 5 7 36 Archived from the original on March 21 2008 Retrieved March 21 2008 Also available at Retrieved July 6 2007 3 Sci fi Literature Genius Guide Imagine Publishing June 14 2012 ISBN 9781908222183 a b Suplee Curt September 5 1984 In the Strange Land Of Robert Heinlein Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved July 29 2021 Robert A and Virginia G Heinlein Papers oac cdlib org Archived from the original on April 25 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 James Gunn Grand Master Award Remarks Archived September 29 2011 at the Wayback Machine Credit Col Earp and Gen Heinlein with the Reactivation of Nevada s Camp Clark The Nevada Daily Mail June 27 1966 Social Affairs of the Army and Navy Los Angeles Times September 1 1929 p B8 Patterson William H Robert A Heinlein In Dialogue with His Century Vol 1 Learning Curve 1907 1948 Tor Books August 2010 ISBN 978 0 7653 1960 9 a b Isaac Asimov I Asimov Patterson William 2010 Chapter 27 Robert A Heinlein 1907 1948 learning curve New York Tom Doherty Associates ISBN 978 0 7653 1960 9 Retrieved April 12 2011 Colorado Voices The festival of history May 31 2011 Archived from the original on December 2 2020 Retrieved October 1 2020 site Robert A Heinlein Archives PM 6 52 Article www nitrosyncretic com Archived from the original on October 13 2020 Retrieved October 1 2020 Heinlein Society Photo Tour of Bonny Doon Archived from the original on August 6 2020 Retrieved April 15 2020 Heinlein Robert A Grumbles from the Grave ch VII 1989 The Rolling Stone Heinleinsociety org May 24 2003 Archived from the original on February 18 2012 Retrieved May 16 2012 Heinlein s Women by G E Rule Heinleinsociety org May 24 2003 Archived from the original on August 2 2012 Retrieved May 16 2012 a b Expanded Universe Afterword to For Us the Living A Comedy of Customs 2004 edition p 245 Robert A Heinlein 2005 Foreword by Michael Cassutt Off the Main Sequence Science Fiction Book Club p xiii ISBN 1 58288 184 7 afterword to For Us the Living A Comedy of Customs 2004 edition p 247 and the story A Bathroom of Her Own Also an unfortunate juxtaposition of events had a Konrad Henlein making headlines in the Sudetenlands a b c Robert A Heinlein at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database ISFDB Retrieved April 4 2013 Asimov Isaac 1972 The early Asimov or Eleven years of trying Garden City NY Doubleday pp 79 82 Williamson Jack Who Was Robert Heinlein in Requiem new collected works by Robert A Heinlein and tributes to the grand master NY 1992 pp 333 34 ISBN 0 312 85523 0 Patterson William 2001 The Martian named Smith critical perspectives on Robert A Heinlein s Stranger in a strange land Sacramento Calif Nitrosyncretic Press ISBN 0967987423 Latham Rob October 10 2018 Beyond pulp trailblazers of science fiction s golden age Nature 562 7726 189 190 Bibcode 2018Natur 562 189L doi 10 1038 d41586 018 06943 8 Causo Roberto de Sousa Citizenship at War Archived from the original on March 15 2006 Retrieved March 4 2006 Patterson William H Jr June 3 2014 Robert A Heinlein In Dialogue with His Century Volume 2 1948 1988 The Man Who Learned Better Macmillan p 207 ISBN 978 1 4299 8796 7 Archived from the original on January 1 2017 Retrieved August 28 2016 Virginia Heinlein to Michael A Banks 1988 On Paul Dirac and antimatter and on blood chemistry A version of the former titled Paul Dirac Antimatter and You was published in the anthology Expanded Universe and it demonstrates both Heinlein s skill as a popularizer and his lack of depth in physics An afterword gives a normalization equation and presents it incorrectly as being the Dirac equation FAQ Frequently Asked Questions about Robert A Heinlein the person The Heinlein Society Archived from the original on February 13 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Photograph probably from 1967 p 127 of Grumbles from the Grave non sequitur Society National Space October 25 2006 Book Review Variable Star National Space Society The Heinlein Archives The Robert A and Virginia Heinlein Archives Archived from the original on December 7 2008 Retrieved October 21 2008 Gussow Mel March 10 2004 Heinlein s Prophetic First Novel Lost and Found The New York Times Working with Robert A Heinlein Thewaythefutureblogs com Archived from the original on August 16 2010 Retrieved November 26 2017 Asimov Isaac December 23 2009 I Asimov A Memoir Random House Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 57353 7 Archived from the original on January 1 2017 Retrieved August 28 2016 Panshin Alexei and Cory The Death of Science Fiction A Dream Part 1 Panshin com Archived from the original on July 30 2016 Retrieved August 28 2016 Panshin Alexei Heinlein and the Golden Age 1 Panshin com Archived from the original on March 25 2016 Retrieved August 28 2016 Electrolite He was the train we did not catch nielsenhayden com Archived from the original on October 29 2012 Retrieved August 28 2016 Robert A Heinlein 2004 For Us the Living A Comedy of Customs Simon and Schuster p 133 ISBN 9780743261579 Robert A Heinlein Expanded Universe foreword to Free Men p 207 of Ace paperback edition Alexei Panshin Heinlein in Dimension Chapter 3 Part 1 Enter net Archived from the original on July 31 2002 Retrieved May 16 2012 The Story of Heinlein in Dimension 6 www panshin com Retrieved December 29 2022 James Blish The Issues at Hand p 52 Stanford Barbara 1999 The Golden Age of Science Fiction Revisited In Helen Wise McFarlen ed Science Fiction on the Cusp of the Twenty First Century Chicago a b John J Miller In A Strange Land National Review Online Books Arts and Manners Archived from the original on July 17 2011 Retrieved November 27 2009 Centenary a modern sci fi giant Archived July 8 2012 at archive today The Free Lance Star June 30 2007 Fango Flashback STARSHIP TROOPERS 1997 Archived from the original on September 19 2015 Verhoeven returned to genre territory optioning a script from his Robocop collaborator Ed Neumeier entitled Bug Hunt at Outpost 9 and refashioning it with elements from Robert Heinlein s Starship Troopers A loose adaptation at best Verhoeven saw the potential in another science fiction satire and pursued it head on Heinlein Starship Troopers A Disastrous Film Adaptation Archived from the original on April 14 2013 Paul Verhoeven The Starship Troopers Hollywood Flashback Interview Thehollywoodinterview blogspot com Archived from the original on July 4 2017 Retrieved November 26 2017 Smith Adam February 12 2014 Triple Dutch Empireonline com Archived from the original on August 29 2016 Retrieved August 29 2016 Libertarian Futurist Society Lfs org Archived from the original on June 28 2011 Retrieved November 26 2017 a b Riggenbach Jeff June 2 2010 Was Robert A Heinlein a Libertarian Mises Daily Ludwig von Mises Institute Archived from the original on September 14 2014 Retrieved September 13 2014 Patterson William H Thornton Andrew The Martian named Smith Critical Perspectives on Robert A Heinlein s Stranger in a Strange Land Nitrosyncretic Press 2001 ISBN 0 9679874 2 3 Gifford James Robert A Heinlein A Reader s Companion Nitrosyncretic Press Sacramento California 2000 p 102 The Number of the Beast ansible uk Retrieved December 29 2022 William H Patterson Jr and Andrew Thornton The Martian Named Smith Critical Perspectives on Robert A Heinlein s Stranger in a Strange Land p 128 His books written after about 1980 belong to a series called by one of the central characters World as Myth The term Multiverse also occurs in the print literature e g Robert A Heinlein A Reader s Companion James Gifford Nitrosyncretic Press Sacramento California 2000 The term World as Myth occurs for the first time in Heinlein s novel The Cat Who Walks Through Walls Robert A Heinlein 1907 1988 Biography of Robert A Heinlein University of California Santa Cruz Archived from the original on April 18 2015 Retrieved November 27 2009 J Neil Schulman 1999 Job A Comedy of Justice Reviewed by J Neil Schulman Robert Heinlein Interview And Other Heinleiniana Pulpless Com p 62 ISBN 978 1 58445 015 3 Lewis converted me from atheism to Christianity Rand converted me back to atheism with Heinlein standing on the sidelines rooting for agnosticism Carole M Cusack 2010 Invented Religions Imagination Fiction and Faith Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 57 ISBN 978 0 7546 9360 4 Heinlein like Robert Anton Wilson was a lifelong agnostic believing that to affirm that there is no God was as silly and unsupported as to affirm that there was a God Heinleinsociety org Heinleinsociety org Archived from the original on January 15 2013 Retrieved May 16 2012 heinleinbooks com Heinleinsociety org Archived from the original on December 27 2014 Retrieved January 17 2015 Heinlein Robert 2020 The pursuit of the Pankera a parallel novel about parallel universes Rockville MD CAEZIK SF amp Fantasy an imprint of Arc Manor Publishers ISBN 978 1647100018 Unseen Robert A Heinlein novel reworks awful The Number of the Beast The Guardian February 8 2019 Archived from the original on November 8 2020 Retrieved February 13 2021 Brown Alan April 9 2020 Long Lost Treasure The Pursuit of the Pankera vs The Number of the Beast by Robert A Heinlein Tor com Archived from the original on April 12 2020 Retrieved May 1 2020 Heinlein Robert 2020 The number of the beast a parallel novel about parallel universes Rockville NY CAEZIK SF amp Fantasy an imprint of Arc Manor Publishers ISBN 978 1647100032 six six six Arc Manor Magazines Archived from the original on February 4 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Pixel Scroll 6 20 19 Mamas Don t Let Your Pixels Grow up to be Scrollers June 21 2019 Archived from the original on June 23 2019 Retrieved June 23 2019 Destination Moon A 70th Anniversary Appreciation www centauri dreams org Raymond Eric December 2 2005 Rudyard Kipling Invented SF ibiblio org Archived from the original on April 1 2017 Retrieved February 26 2019 A Master of our Art The Kipling Society June 21 2021 Retrieved December 29 2022 a b J Neil Schulman The Robert Heinlein Interview and other Heinleiniana 1973 page needed Clareson Thomas D Sanders Joe December 30 2013 The Heritage of Heinlein A Critical Reading of the Fiction McFarland ISBN 9780786474981 Archived from the original on June 5 2021 Retrieved February 26 2019 via Google Books Sturgis Amy 2008 Heinlein Robert 1907 1988 In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA SAGE Cato Institute pp 223 24 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n134 ISBN 978 1 4129 6580 4 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 Archived from the original on September 30 2020 Retrieved February 16 2016 Robert Heinlein at 100 Reason com July 9 2007 Archived from the original on July 12 2012 Retrieved November 26 2017 Cusack Carole Science Fiction as Scripture Robert A Heinlein s Stranger in a Strange Land and the Church of All Worlds Reprinted in Lawrence J Trudeau Ed Twentieth Century Literary Criticism Vol 337 Detroit Gale Cengage 2016 Pp 282 293 Archived from the original on June 5 2021 Retrieved November 26 2017 a b c Heinlein s Conservatism National Review October 25 2010 Retrieved December 29 2022 Cowan M E 2004 A Heinlein Concordance www heinleinsociety org Archived from the original on May 11 2019 Retrieved April 20 2019 Paid Advertisement Galaxy Science Fiction June 1968 pp 4 11 Patterson William 2014 Robert A Heinlein 1948 1988 The Man Who Learned Better New York Tom Doherty Associates p 389 ISBN 978 0 7653 1961 6 Erisman Fred Robert Heinlein s Case for Racial Tolerance 1954 1956 Extrapolation 29 no 3 1988 216 226 Pearson Wendy Race relations in The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy Themes Works and Wonders Volume 2 Gary Westfahl ed Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group 2005 pp 648 50 Heinlein Robert A 1954 The Star Beast Charles Schribner s Sons p 31 Heinlein Robert A 1954 The Star Beast Charles Schribner s Sons p 249 FAQ Heinlein s Works Heinleinsociety org Archived from the original on April 22 2019 Retrieved May 16 2012 J Daniel Gifford 2000 Robert A Heinlein a reader s companion Nitrosyncretic Press p 201 ISBN 978 0 9679874 1 5 Archived from the original on January 1 2017 Retrieved February 16 2016 The reference in Tunnel in the Sky is subtle and ambiguous but at least one college instructor who teaches the book reports that some students always ask Is he black see 102 The Heinlein scholar and critic James Gifford see bibliography states A very subtle point in the book one found only by the most careful reading and confirmed by Virginia Heinlein is that Rod Walker is black The most telling clues are Rod s comments about Caroline Mshiyeni being similar to his sister and the obvious to all of the other characters pairing of Rod and Caroline 103 Robert A Heinlein Expanded Universe foreword to Solution Unsatisfactory p 93 of Ace paperback edition Citations at Sixth Column Appel J M July 1 2009 Is all fair in biological warfare The controversy over genetically engineered biological weapons Journal of Medical Ethics 35 7 429 432 doi 10 1136 jme 2008 028944 ISSN 0306 6800 PMID 19567692 S2CID 1643086 Hickman John Spring 2021 Yellow Perils of Robert Heinlein European Journal of American Studies 16 1 doi 10 4000 ejas 16749 Archived from the original on June 2 2021 Retrieved May 30 2021 For example recruitment officer Mr Weiss in Starship Troopers p 37 New English Library London 1977 edition Robert A Heinlein Expanded Universe p 396 of Ace paperback edition Robert A Heinlein Starship Troopers p 121 of Berkley Medallion paperback edition William H Patterson jnr s Introduction to The Rolling Stones Baen New York 2009 edition p 3 Jordison Sam January 12 2009 Robert Heinlein s softer side The Guardian London Books Blog Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved July 30 2014 Gary Westfahl Superladies in Waiting How the Female Hero Almost Emerges in Science Fiction Foundation vol 58 1993 pp 42 62 a b The Heinlein Society The Heinlein Society Archived from the original on July 8 2012 Retrieved May 16 2012 Bright Robin Self Begetting Ourobouros The Science Fiction of Robert A Heinlein page 167 Harvard Parkin Speer Diane Robert A Heinlein The Novelist as Preacher Extrapolation 20 no 3 1979 214 222 Gulf Heinlein Concordance www heinleinsociety org Archived from the original on February 24 2021 Retrieved May 22 2019 Pay It Forward The Heinlein Society Archived from the original on March 18 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Anders Charlie Jane September 14 2011 Amazingly Touching 1976 Letter from Ray Bradbury to Robert Heinlein Your influence on us all cannot be measured io9 Archived from the original on September 27 2019 Retrieved May 22 2019 Moss Tyler August 26 2016 Writers Helping Writers Interview With Jonathan Maberry Writer s Digest Archived from the original on September 5 2019 Retrieved September 5 2019 Pay It Forward The Heinlein Society Archived from the original on December 22 2017 Retrieved November 26 2017 Heinlein Society Heinleinsociety org Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved November 26 2017 Freedman Carl April 24 2000 Critical Theory and Science Fiction 1st ed Wesleyan University Press p 71 ISBN 978 0819563996 Rudyard Kipling Invented SF Armed and Dangerous Retrieved December 29 2022 The Writer s Writing Guide Exposition Archived December 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine With indirect exposition the writer gives the reader the data in subtle but clear ways thereby allowing the reader to be a partner when it comes to laying the foundation of the story For instance the narrator of Mona Simpson s story Lawns begins by telling us I steal I ve stolen books and money and even letters Letters are great I can t tell you the feeling walking down the street with 20 dollars in my purse stolen earrings in my pocket With this opening we learn about the narrator s obsession with theft but equally important we learn the narrator s gender This is done indirectly by referring to the narrator s purse and the desire for stolen earrings On the Writing of Speculative Fiction Robert A Heinlein Science Fiction Science Scribd Archived from the original on June 25 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Weil Ellen Wolfe Gary K November 26 2017 Harlan Ellison The Edge of Forever Ohio State University Press ISBN 9780814208922 Archived from the original on June 5 2021 Retrieved November 26 2017 via Google Books Heinlein s Rules Introduction Deanwesleysmith com Archived from the original on November 20 2017 Retrieved November 26 2017 Panshin p 3 describing de Camp s Science Fiction Handbook Robert A Heinlein July 1 2013 The Virginia Edition A Sample of the Series PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 1 2013 Retrieved December 29 2022 The Charles Stross FAQ Antipope org Archived from the original on January 25 2021 Retrieved November 26 2017 Interview Charlie s Diary Antipope org August 27 2010 Archived from the original on November 2 2012 Retrieved August 23 2012 Liptak Andrew March 28 2019 The Light Brigade is a worthy successor to Starship Troopers The Verge Archived from the original on April 17 2019 Retrieved April 17 2019 The New York Times Magazine On Language by William Safire September 3 2006 Church Of All Worlds Original caw org Archived from the original on November 1 2010 Retrieved November 26 2017 Polyamory in the News Polyamory enters the Oxford English Dictionary and tracking the word s origins Archived from the original on June 5 2021 Retrieved June 28 2020 Hammer and Feather www hq nasa gov Retrieved December 29 2022 CBS News Robert Heinlein and Arthur C Clarke interview with Walter Cronkite Apollo 11 CBS News October 6 2016 Archived from the original on July 1 2020 Retrieved June 17 2020 Patterson William 2010 Robert A Heinlein 1907 1948 learning curve New York Tom Doherty Associates p 13 ISBN 978 0 7653 1960 9 Archived from the original on June 5 2021 Retrieved April 12 2011 Levy Steven 1984 Hackers Heroes of the Computer Revolution Anchor Press Doubleday p 159 ISBN 0 385 19195 2 Cowen Tyler June 15 2022 Marc Andreessen on Learning to Love the Humanities Ep 152 The real challenge to building on the frontier Figuring out human behavior Conversations with Tyler The Mercatus Center at George Mason University Retrieved June 28 2022 I m one of the few people I know who thinks that late Robert Heinlein was better than early Robert Heinlein That had a really big effect on me Creative Jobs Careers for Graphic Designers Copywriters Social Media Managers Proof Readers and More www mediabistro com Retrieved December 29 2022 BSFS s Robert A Heinlein Award Page Version DA 3 Baltimore Science Fiction Society September 19 2011 Archived from the original on September 24 2011 Retrieved September 21 2011 The Locus Index to SF Awards About the Robert A Heinlein Award Locus Online Archived from the original on October 25 2012 Retrieved May 19 2013 Gerrold David 1973 The World of Star Trek New York Ballantine Books p 271 Gerrold 1973 p 274 Janifer Laurence M 2001 The Counterfeit Heinlein Wildside Press Carl Wiser May 17 2013 Songwriter Interviews Jon Anderson of Yes songfacts com Archived from the original on June 28 2013 Romano W 2010 Mountains Come Out of the Sky The Illustrated History of Prog Rock Backbeat Books ISBN 9781617133756 Torem Lisa October 20 2009 Jimmy Webb Interview Penny Black Music Archived from the original on October 15 2011 Retrieved November 14 2012 The Green Hills of Earth retrieved December 29 2022 Green Hills of Earth retrieved December 29 2022 Mark Bernstein April 13 2016 The Green Hills of Earth at FKO 2016 Archived from the original on June 5 2021 Retrieved February 26 2019 via YouTube The Locus Index to SF Awards Nebula Award Nominees Archived from the original on April 24 2012 1941 Retro Hugo Awards The Hugo Awards December 29 2015 Archived from the original on August 14 2017 Retrieved April 4 2020 1943 Retro Hugo Awards The Hugo Awards March 30 2018 Archived from the original on May 7 2011 Retrieved April 4 2020 1951 Retro Hugo Awards The Hugo Awards July 26 2007 Archived from the original on May 7 2011 Retrieved April 4 2020 Inkpot Award Chamberlin Alan SSD jpl nasa gov SSD jpl nasa gov Archived from the original on March 10 2012 Retrieved May 16 2012 site Robert A Heinlein Archives Heinlein Crater Mars www nitrosyncretic com Archived from the original on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Heinlein Crater Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved November 30 2017 Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame Archived May 21 2013 at the Wayback Machine Mid American Science Fiction and Fantasy Conventions Inc Retrieved March 23 2013 This was the official website of the hall of fame to 2004 The Robert A Heinlein Endowed Chair in Aerospace Engineering SFWA News May 2 2015 Archived from the original on May 2 2015 Retrieved November 26 2017 Radford Bill July 26 2008 Sci fi writers fans gear up for Worldcon The Colorado Springs Gazette Robert Heinlein to be inducted into Hall of Famous Missourians Missouri House of Representatives Archived from the original on February 18 2019 Retrieved February 17 2019 Hall of Famous Missourians Missouri House of Representatives Archived from the original on November 21 2017 Retrieved November 30 2017 Libertarian Futurist Society Prometheus Awards Lfs org Archived from the original on May 1 2013 Retrieved November 26 2017 Other sources Edit Critical Edit H Bruce Franklin 1980 Robert A Heinlein America as Science Fiction Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 502746 9 A critique of Heinlein from a Marxist perspective Includes a biographical chapter which incorporates some original research on Heinlein s family background dd James Gifford 2000 Robert A Heinlein A Reader s Companion Sacramento Nitrosyncretic Press ISBN 0 9679874 1 5 hardcover ISBN 0967987407 trade paperback A comprehensive bibliography with roughly one page of commentary on each of Heinlein s works dd Farah Mendlesohn 2019 Pleasant Profession of Robert A Heinlein ISBN 978 1 78352 678 9 Alexei Panshin 1968 Heinlein in Dimension Advent ISBN 0 911682 12 0 978 0 911682 01 4 OCLC 7535112 Patterson William H Jr and Thornton Andrew 2001 The Martian Named Smith Critical Perspectives on Robert A Heinlein s Stranger in a Strange Land Sacramento Nitrosyncretic Press ISBN 0 9679874 2 3 Powell Jim 2000 The Triumph of Liberty New York Free Press See profile of Heinlein in the chapter Out of this World Tom Shippey 2000 Starship Troopers Galactic Heroes Mercenary Princes Ihe Military and Its Discontents in Science Fiction in Alan Sandison and Robert Dingley eds Histories of the Future Studies in Fact Fantasy and Science Fiction New York Palgrave ISBN 0 312 23604 2 George Edgar Slusser Robert A Heinlein Stranger in His Own Land The Milford Series Popular Writers of Today Vol 1 San Bernardino CA The Borgo Press Slusser George Edgar 1977 The classic years of Robert A Heinlein San Bernardino CA Borgo Press ISBN 978 0893702168 James Blish writing as William Atheling Jr 1970 More Issues at Hand Chicago Advent Bellagamba Ugo and Picholle Eric 2008 Solutions Non Satisfaisantes une Anatomie de Robert A Heinlein Lyon France Les Moutons Electriques ISBN 978 2 915793 37 6 in French Biographical Edit Patterson William H Jr 2010 Robert A Heinlein in Dialogue With His Century 1907 1948 Learning Curve An Authorized Biography Volume I Tom Doherty Associates ISBN 0 7653 1960 8 Patterson William H Jr 2014 Robert A Heinlein in Dialogue With His Century 1948 1988 The Man Who Learned Better An Authorized Biography Volume II Tom Doherty Associates ISBN 0 7653 1961 6 Heinlein Robert A 2004 For Us the Living New York Scribner ISBN 0 7432 5998 X Includes an introduction by Spider Robinson an afterword by Robert E James with a long biography and a shorter biographical sketch dd Patterson William H Jr 1999 Robert Heinlein A biographical sketch The Heinlein Journal 1999 5 7 36 Also available at Robert A Heinlein A Biographical Sketch Archived August 14 2001 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 1 2005 A lengthy essay that treats Heinlein s own autobiographical statements with skepticism dd The Heinlein Society Archived March 27 2012 at the Wayback Machine and their FAQ Archived April 22 2019 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved May 30 2005 Contains a shorter version of the Patterson bio dd Heinlein Robert A 1989 Grumbles from the Grave New York Del Rey Incorporates a substantial biographical sketch by Virginia Heinlein which hews closely to his earlier official bios omitting the same facts the first of his three marriages his early left wing political activities and repeating the same fictional anecdotes the short story contest dd Vicary Elizabeth Zoe 2000 American National Biography Online article Heinlein Robert Anson Retrieved June 1 2005 not available for free Repeats many incorrect statements from Heinlein s fictionalized professional bio dd Heinlein Robert A 1980 Expanded Universe New York Ace ISBN 0 441 21888 1 Autobiographical notes are interspersed between the pieces in the anthology Reprinted by Baen hardcover October 2003 ISBN 0 7434 7159 8 Reprinted by Baen paperback July 2005 ISBN 0 7434 9915 8 dd dd Stover Leon 1987 Robert Heinlein Boston Twayne External links EditRobert A Heinlein at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity The Heinlein Society site RAH Heinlein Archives Robert amp Virginia Heinlein Prize Centennial Celebration in Kansas City July 7 2007 Heinlein Nexus Archived October 27 2020 at the Wayback Machine the community continuation of the Centennial effort 1952 Popular Mechanics tour of Heinlein s Colorado house accessed June 3 2005 Heinleinia com an interactive exploration of Heinlein s life and works Heinlein giving the Guest of Honor speech at the 34th World Science Fiction Convention on YouTubeBiography and criticism Edit Robert A Heinlein biography Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame Frederik Pohl on Working with Robert A Heinlein Review amp biographical essay on Heinlein by Lee Sandlin The Wall Street Journal June 27 2014 Heinlein was the best sci fi writer of all time and then mysteriously he became the worst Bibliography and works Edit Further information Robert A Heinlein bibliography Robert A Heinlein at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Robert A Heinlein at the Internet Book List Works by Robert A Heinlein at Open Library Works by or about Robert A Heinlein at Internet Archive Robert A Heinlein at IMDb Finding aid for the Robert A and Virginia G Heinlein Papers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert A Heinlein amp oldid 1143983031, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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