Presenting Author - Robert A. Heinlein

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Prof. Tarma Amelia Black
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Presenting Author - Robert A. Heinlein

Post by Prof. Tarma Amelia Black »

Name of the author: Robert A. Heinlein (other pen names: Anson MacDonald, Lyle Monroe, John Riverside, Caleb Saunders, Simon York)
Main genre: Science Fiction, Horror, Children, Fiction
Main audience: while he wrote some children's stories, I'd say his main audience is Young Adult on

Main books: Stranger in a Strange Land, The Puppet Masters, Starship Troopers, Have Space Suit Will Travel, Time Enough for Love, The Star Beast -- these are just a few of the books on Goodreads list of books -- and he wrote more than those, including numerous short stories. (He had 32 novels, 59 short stories, and 16 collections published.)

Short summary of the author: Robert Heinlein had the academic and practical knowledge to write science fiction and was very inventive in his works. "In the first chapter of the novel Space Cadet he anticipated the cell-phone, 35 years before Motorola invented the technology." "He also anticipated mechanical computer aided design with "Drafting Dan" and described a modern version of a waterbed in his novel The Door into Summer, though he never patented or built one." wikipedia page

This man wrote a couple of the most scary books I've ever read. One of them was The Puppet Masters and the other is The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag. I think that what was so scary about them is that they both contain truth about 'what is' -- and the consequences of 'what is'. The Puppet Masters has been made into a movie two times. The first one, with Donald Sutherland, is frightening and yet it is not half as frightening as the book! I encountered his books while working in the school library and read everything they had. I loved reading about "intelligent, fiercely independent female characters" and also very much enjoyed his books because he wrote about feelings and life. (I also read Isimov but while he has very good books, for me he is too much up-in-his-head.) Heinlein invented some words - grok ( click ), waldo ( click ), speculative fiction ( click ), as well as popularizing TANSTAAFL ( click ) and other words and expressions. I find it very grand that he invented the word 'grok' because it was needed in the story and the words in English which refer to that way of knowing (to know something from your heart and gut and not from ego/intellect) had fallen out of common usage. The closest word which is used now in the English language is the Scottish word 'ken' (to know, or understand). Oddly, when looking up the word 'ken' online, none of the English words to define it work! A person has to go to another language, such as Spanish or German, to obtain more of an accurate definition. For example, with Spanish - compare the difference of conocer and saber. [To express knowledge or ignorance of a fact or information about something, use “saber.” To say that one is or is not acquainted with a person, a place, or an object, use conocer. ( click ) .] Heinlein bypassed all of that and invented grok and within the context and content of his book, people acquired that word resonance again.

As for popularity -- his books have acquired a range from those who feel he is the best science fiction author to ever walk on the earth to those who would burn every book he wrote and dance upon the ashes.

Goodreads has this writeup:
Robert Anson Heinlein was an American novelist and science fiction writer. Often called "the dean of science fiction writers", he is one of the most popular, influential, and controversial authors of "hard science fiction".

He set a high standard for science and engineering plausibility and helped to raise the genre's standards of literary quality. He was the first SF writer to break into mainstream, general magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, in the late 1940s. He was also among the first authors of bestselling, novel-length science fiction in the modern, mass-market era.
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Prof. Tarma Amelia Black
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Posts: 8336
Joined: Sun Dec 14, 2003 6:31 am

Re: Presenting Author - Robert A. Heinlein

Post by Prof. Tarma Amelia Black »

Title of the book: The Star Beast
Author: Robert A. Heinlein
Series: no
Genres: Science Fiction, Fiction, Young Adult
Short summary of the story: John Thomas Stewart XI inherited 'Cuddlepup', down the line from when John Thomas Stewart VIII smuggled him into his jump bag while on a space expedition and brought him home. He was then the size of a collie - albeit with eight legs. Now, many years later, 'Cuddlepup', renamed 'Lummox', is more the size of a couple of bull elephants. He leaves his yard because he wishes to munch on some roses in the yard (which John Stewart had not specifically forbade to him to go.) The 8x8 timbers, bolted together with extremely heavy bolts, accidentally break when he put her head between a space at the bottom and pushed gently. Munching on the roses, he is startled by the owner of the roses screeching at him -- and thus starts a trail of destruction. John Stewart finds out about it from his mother, his girl friend Betty finds out about it (from everyone), and law enforcement attempts to (without due process) kill the critter by drowning him in a reservoir. No one told them Lummox can hold his breath indefinitely -- and eats metal. Lummox ate the control knob on the reservoir and all the water drained out and Lummox decided to go home. Commence havoc!

In the meantime, a kind of people that humans have never encountered come to Earth and demand the return of their kidnapped child. The Earth officials, one of whom is Mr. Kiku, Under Secretary for Spacial Affairs, having never heard of these people, the Hroshii, assume that they are a relatively new and unsophisticated people. They also deny that there is any Hroshii child on their planet. Guess what. They're wrong -- and orders have gone out to destroy Lummox. The Hroshii are not happy, and want to destroy the planet. John Stewart is not happy and runs away from home with Lummox. Mrs. Stewart (John's mother) is not happy because her attempts to guilt-trip John and/or control him failed. Betty ... Betty remains Betty and happy. She utterly fails to be overwhelmed by circumstances and is always attempting to get things right for her John Stewart and Lummox. Mr. Kiku takes control of the politician who is about to cause the planet to be destroyed and saves the day (sort of), with Betty's aid. But I won't say 'how'. You get that pleasure yourself if you read it.

***
When I was a kid I loved this book. I just re-read it for 'book bingo' and am delighted that I still love it.Since I am now older and have experienced more of the general population, I find that I'm rather amazed at Mr. Heinlein's extreme ability to deliver rather pungent views of mankind in the midst of a very amusing story. This is something I didn't notice when I first read it -- I gave more attention to the excellent story! However, the caricatures of the different persons in the story, I find, are actually rather right on for so much of the general 2-legger population. Yes, folks really are that way. There were some authentic people in the book - including Lummox. But the mother ... some of the politicians ... some of the policemen ... I've met exactly that.

When I was a kid and read it, as well as enjoying the story tremendously, I loved it as a statement about prejudice. Whooops. Don't be hasty to call someone backwards if they and their people can destroy the planet upon which you live. Now I read it and am glad that there are some authentic people in it. I particularly loved the lip-service of those who think that women are to be regarded as less-than and yet the one (no, two) persons who run circles around the entirety of the population are ... ta da ... two of female gender. (As of the end of the story, Lummox is revealed to be of female gender.)

Goodreads write-up:
Lummox had been the Stuart family pet for years. Though far from cuddly and rather large, it had always been obedient and docile. Except, that is, for the time it had eaten the secondhand Buick . . .
But now, all of a sudden and without explanation, Lummox had begun chomping down on a variety of things -- not least, a very mean dog and a cage of virtually indestructible steel. Incredible!
John Thomas and Lummox were soon in awfully hot water, and they didn't know how to get out. And neither one really understood just how bad things were -- or how bad the situation could get -- until some space voyagers appeared and turned a far-from-ordinary family problem into an extraordinary confrontation.
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"You have the inborn natural right to remain silent. Don't think about it, don't talk about it, shuush ....... STILL." ~ Xaris
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