Remembering Robert A. Heinlein

Commentary by Kip Hansen – 2 June 2021

There is a certain beauty in remembering the great influences of one’s youth.  For me, one of those influences was Robert Anson Heinlein who could reasonably be called one of the the world’s greatest writers of science fiction.

His books and stories – which first began to appear in 1939 with the publishing of Life-Linerepresented the very best of the space-age hard-science fiction genera of the 20th century.  I am older, but not old enough to have read Life-Line in Astounding when it was first published, but I read it twenty years later as a precocious pre-teen-aged boy bent on reading every single science fiction book and every edition of every pulp science fiction magazine that could be found in the main branch of the Los Angeles County Library.   By the time I was 15, I had accomplished that dubiously important feat.

As part of that rather mad reading binge, I read everything that Heinlein had written to date, and then read everything he published since then as it became available until his death in 1988.   I bet that many of you who were born in the first decade after World War II and went on to study science and engineering read Heinlein as well.

Heinlein was one of the core members of the stable of SciFi writers assembled by John W. Campbell  — editor of Astounding which later  became  Analog Science Fiction  — who was responsible for much of the success of the whole genera.  Isaac Asimov called Campbell “the most powerful force in science fiction ever” and said the “first ten years of his editorship he dominated the field completely.”

Heinlein himself was often referred to as “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.” [ Keith Booker et al. The Science Fiction Handbook ]

After graduating from the U.S. Naval Academy and serving in the U.S. Navy in the 1930s and was discharged in 1934 because he contracted tuberculosis, undergoing lengthy hospitalization.  Living on his naval disability pension, Heinlein turned to writing, selling his first story, Life-Line,  to John Campbell at Astounding and the rest is history. 

Interestingly, Heinlein was an engineer by training, and spent the years of WWII “as a civilian aeronautical engineer at the Navy Aircraft Materials Center at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in Pennsylvania. Heinlein recruited Isaac Asimov and L. Sprague de Camp to also work there.  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.”  [ wiki ]

SciFi fans will know that Asimov and Sprague de Camp were also core authors publishing in Campbell’s  Astounding along with two other SciFi greats Theodore Sturgeon and Arthur C. Clarke and, of course, Campbell himself was writing under his own name and several pen names: Don A. Stuart, Karl Van Kampen and Arthur McCann.

Even if you don’t know Heinlein from reading his books, you will have been exposed to his contributions to modern English. You may hear some young pretty Hollywood star/starlet say that they “really grok that”. They’ve made whole movies about “pay it forward”.  Engineers  or robotics designers will know what a “waldo” is.  And you have yourself have called someone a “moonbat” (from the story Space Jockey).

Heinlein’s book, Stranger in a Strange Land, spawned a series of small cult groups based on the social structure described in the book and one incorporated Church whose founder took the ideas in the book way too seriously.  In the early 1970s, I personally knew a young man that ran off to join a Stranger cult.

Heinlein wrote and wrote, during his 81-year lifetime:

“The Robert A. Heinlein bibliography includes 32 novels, 59 short stories and 16 collections published during his life. Four films, two TV series, several episodes of a radio series, and a board game derive 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 non-fiction books and two poems have been published posthumously. One novel has been published posthumously and another, an unusual collaboration, was published in 2006. Four collections have been published posthumously.

Known pseudonyms include Anson MacDonald (7 times), Lyle Monroe (7), John Riverside (1), Caleb Saunders (1), and Simon York (1). All the works originally attributed to MacDonald, Saunders, Riverside and York, and many of the works originally attributed to Lyle Monroe, were later reissued in various Heinlein collections and attributed to Heinlein.” [ source ]

Heinlein had influence far outside the SciFi world, as did many other SciFi authors.  For instance:

“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, or “Star Wars” as derided by Senator Ted Kennedy. Heinlein assisted with Council contribution to the Reagan “Star Wars” speech of Spring 1983.”

One example of the depth of Heinlein’s reach into our society in general is illustrated by the fictional song “Green Hills of Earth” from the story of the same title — fictionally written by a blind space-going engineer named “Noisy” Rhysling presented as a radiation-blinded, unemployable spaceship engineer crisscrossing the solar system writing and singing songs.  The song has verses and fragments of verses attributed to it not only in Heinlein’s own stories over the years, but in the work many other science fiction writers of the day and since.  One of the most recent examples shows up in the naming of a crater on the moon:       

“The Apollo XV astronauts named a number of craters in their landing area after favorite science fiction stories. Near “Dune” (after the Frank Herbert novel) and “Earthlight” (Arthur C. Clarke) craters was “Rhysling” crater, named after the blind singer of the spaceways in “The Green Hills of Earth.” [ source ]

You can listen to Leonard Nimoy read “The Green Hills of Earth” in the three part YouTube series:  Part 1Part 2,   Part 3.

Not everyone is a Heinlein fan.  Not everyone liked his politics – I ignored them personally.  Not everyone liked his views on social structure and sexuality.  If he had written things that everyone would like or lived a life that everyone would approve of, he would not have been one of the greats.

My favorite quote from the master is this:

“There are but two ways of forming an opinion in science. One is the scientific method; the other, the scholastic. One can judge from experiment, or one can blindly accept authority. To the scientific mind, experimental proof is all important, and theory merely a convenience in description, to be junked when it no longer fits. To the academic mind, authority is everything and facts are junked when they do not fit theory laid down by authority” – Robert A. Heinlein in the short story Life-Line.

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Author’s Comment:

I’d like to hear from readers with their thoughts and impressions. Not restricted to Heinlein, there were so many greats in the 1940-1980 SciFi scene.

Why bring up Heinlein today?    I friend has been reading my stuff here over the years and sent the final quote after reading my essay on Hurricane Sandy and storm surge damage

Address comments to “Kip…” if speaking to me.

Thanks for reading.

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June 1, 2021 7:44 am

The Roads Must Roll seems to be a rather appropriate read in the current environment.

Mark D
June 1, 2021 7:59 am

Thanks Kip for the walk down memory lane. I just finished my umpteenth reading of “Time Enough for Love” and every time I learn something new. RAH had more influence on my youth in the fifties and sixties and… well my entire life than any other living person.

Simon Derricutt
June 1, 2021 8:01 am

Kip – by chance, I’ve recently re-read my little collection of Heinlein stories. Though he did end up with female characters somewhat more round-heeled than I’ve experienced in real life, and he had a bit of a fixation on swordsmanship (maybe because he was himself a sword champion), if you put that aside then his characters are pretty believable. The books are not so much about the science, but more of how people and society work given a certain technological base. Some of that science may end up being close to true because the way it’s used has been explored by Heinlein (and of course others), so when some odd effect is experimentally seen, someone may see how that results in the technology described in the SF.

Thus we all knew what waldoes did before anyone had managed to manufacture any, and there are plans being made to build a space elevator (A.C.Clarke). The Dick Tracy video-watch is also now a reality. Unfortunately people do say they grok things when they merely think they understand them, but hey….

Over the years I’ve become far less willing to dismiss things as theoretically impossible – I’ve seen too many theories get modified or discarded as experiment exposes their failings. Some of the SF ideas about space travel may not be too far off – see http://physicsfromtheedge.blogspot.com/2021/02/horizon-engineers.html for a recent announcement of experimental results. If that proceeds as well as it appears, then fairly soon we should be able to mine asteroids and travel around the solar system cheaply, and may even head off to the stars. Incidentally Mike has a DARPA grant for his research, so at least his theory is considered to have enough merit to put official money behind. This also has implications for other transport and for energy production, as well as fundamental physics.

Maybe what Heinlein taught us, unnoticed in the course of reading a ripping yarn, was that maybe more things are possible than current science admits. Though few people will put any effort into stuff that they consider totally impossible, if there’s some chance that a thing might be possible then some people will try to do it. Of course, such attempts to “break the laws of physics” mostly turn out to fail, but some of them will succeed where what’s being broken is not natural laws but what people thought they were because they forgot about Black Swans. To get a different result, you need to do something significantly different.

In future, Heinlein and the other SF writers may end up being credited for opening up peoples’ imagination as to what is possible. Maybe also the warnings of dystopia will have an effect, too, and help us avoid them (though today “1984” seems to be being used as a template rather than a warning).

June 1, 2021 8:05 am

The last and newest SF I read was from Liu Cixin, a Chines author, .the Trisolaris Triology, I was impressed a lot of. Only the very end had room for improvement.

There were also some stories written by John Brunner I liked a lot.

Michael Doll
Reply to  Kip Hansen
June 1, 2021 3:15 pm

Try “Polymath” instead. Lighter, comparable to early Heinlein. For the long view, “The Traveller in Black” (closer to Fantasy, and featuring more spirituality).

For hard Sci Fi my go-to author was Charles Sheffield. I’ve been an avid reader for 4 decades now, listing Heinlein and Clarke as long term favourites, and have yet to encounter a brain-stretcher like <i>The Ganymede Club</i>. There are at least 6 “logical” progressions within that culture that would each be their own book or series for a lesser author.

Sara
June 1, 2021 8:20 am

Oh, GAWD!!!! I was 10 years old. I had an allowance of $2/week for setting and clearing the dinner table. I could go downtown on the bus for $.10 and spend all day Saturday at the library, sitting on the floor of the book stacks, reading all the sci-fi I wanted to.

My favorite writers were Paul Ffrench (Asimov), writing “Lucky Starr and” whatever, and Heinlein, because those books were written to stir the imagination instead of squelching it when some school teacher said “that can’t happen because” and didn’t like it when the response was “PROVE IT!”

Sci-fi was meant to stir the imagination and take away the road blocks… and it did.

Sara
Reply to  Sara
June 1, 2021 8:25 am

FWIW, Heinlein’s description of the Moon as seen by Kip when he and Peewee are trying to escape Wormface is a near-perfect description of what it’s really like, worn-down, rounded smooth hills, mostly flat…. as if he’d been there.

Sara
Reply to  Kip Hansen
June 1, 2021 7:19 pm

Thank you, kind sir!!!!

Sunsettommy
June 1, 2021 8:34 am

Inherit the stars 1977 which was so good that Isaac Asimov said: “Pure Science fiction,,, Arthur Clarke move over!”

I knew him as a friend (James P. Hogan) through the e-mails I had with him, he was an early skeptic of the AGW conjecture, with a good science background, but sadly he died too early in 2010 at age 69, I was stunned by the news.

It is one of the most plausible science fiction story I have ever read, great mystery story worth reading and has two other books of the series

At one time I owned over 350 science fiction books some were vintage fist edition too, but stopped when I got married.

There is a set of Hall of Fame Books worth buying where the best and most celebrated science fiction are found, mostly Nebula award winners.

The Hugo Awards website

The Nebula Awards website

Sunsettommy
June 1, 2021 8:34 am

It was Podkayne of Mars that got me reading some of his books which were The Moon is a harsh mistress and Stranger in a strange land as the favorite examples.

But I liked a lot of others too written by many authors.

Some personal favorites:

The Foundation Series by Asimov first one in 1942

The Gods Themselves 1972

Conjure Wife 1943

The Marching morons 1951

The baby is three 1952

With folded hands 1954

The Martian Way 1952

The big front yard 1958

Slan 1940

City 1944

When HARLIE was one 1972

The Roads must Roll by Heinlein 1940 (Retro Hugo Award winner)

Reply to  Sunsettommy
June 1, 2021 9:00 am

The Foundation Series by Asimov first one in 1942

There are a lot of follow-ups written much later I like very much.

Reply to  Krishna Gans
June 1, 2021 2:37 pm

I have heard that the Foundation trilogy was being made into a series by HBO.

EARL T SMITH
June 1, 2021 8:48 am

I had the pleasure of meeting RAH back about 1983 at the L5 Conference in San Francisco. As we were both former Naval Officers we spent hours telling Sea Stories with Bob and his wife. The one thing I noted from that event was that at a banquet with about 100 attendees there were about 10 current, former, or future Nuclear Submariners . Self selecting populations.

PaulH
June 1, 2021 8:54 am

I read most of Heinlein’s books back in the 90’s. Having read most of Asimov’s works, I was looking for more. 🙂 The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, JOB: A Comedy of Justice, and Time Enough For Love are just a few of Heinlein’s book I enjoyed reading.

Of the contemporary writers, I like the Expanse series by James S A Corey, and the Frontiers series by Ryk Brown.

Reply to  PaulH
June 1, 2021 1:52 pm

The Expanse: I’ve followed the TV series, keep meaning to get to the books. Just too many already on my list. I really appreciate the harder-science approach. They even accounted for it in the show – I loved the twisting column of water when he poured it from higher up, due to the spin of the station. (I’m not sure exactly how accurate it is, but it was a really nice touch to show that they were at least thinking about that sort of stuff, a welcome change.)

Reply to  TonyG
June 1, 2021 2:40 pm

I wonder if the Expanse borrowed from RAH when Mars threw rocks atearth?

Donald Shockley
June 1, 2021 9:13 am

Reading Starship Troopers in college directly led me to join the US Navy to do my fair share and ended up staying in for 12 years. Still got all the books.

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Clyde Spencer
June 1, 2021 9:18 am

Kip

Probably the most influential SciFi story I read as a youth was A. E. van Vogt’s The Weapon Shops of Isher. It implicitly makes the case for the importance and wisdom of the Second Amendment.

I think that the power of science fiction is that for political issues, which are often highly polarized, it frames the debate in a context that is removed from the current polarization and provides a fresh viewpoint.

Doug Huffman
June 1, 2021 9:22 am

My first science fiction book series was Ruthven Todd’s four volume 1952 Space Cat series. Tracking down print editions led me to Baldwin’s Book Barn in West Chester, Pennsylvania.

June 1, 2021 10:16 am

Kip, I find this very timely and appropriate to my own work and vision. I am an infectious disease physician on the “dark side” of sixty and I spend most of my work time either caring for patients or teaching others how to care for patients.

My career has been illuminated (or darkened if you prefer) by the many examples of main stream medicine deriving consensus ideas and practices by exactly the academic method described in the final quote. I knew Heinlein’s books as a youth and remember enjoying his stories but very little of the detail. It appears I may have missed one of the most insightful and prescient quotes of his and so I had to spend several decades getting to an understanding of the same concept.

I find myself these days taking every possible opportunity to challenge patients, trainees and clinical peers on critical thinking, scientific process and how we go wrong. My few lectures are always focused on the topic and most of my reading is directed to finding our most important wrong beliefs and trying to understand how we go astray.

Unfortunately this is a problem that should be nipped in the bud in children’s early years through education and practical experience but we seem to have forgotten to train our minds just as we have allowed a large proportion of our species to become lazy, fat and unfit physically. It seems we as a species are naturally inclined to bad habits and sloppy thinking just as soon as wealth and ease make the consequences of bad decisions too remote to see without slight effort.

Rich Hosek
June 1, 2021 1:28 pm

TANSTAAFL is the Heinlinism that stuck with me, from “The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.”

There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch.

I think that applies to all the fanciful solutions bandied about for all of our perceived problems.

Abolition Man
June 1, 2021 1:36 pm

Wow, Kip!
You really know how stir up the old memory banks! I started reading SF when my mother set me loose in the local library at 10 or 11 years old! I would happily read for an hour or two before heading home with a stack of books for the next two weeks. Heinlein, Asimov, Clarke, E.E.”Doc”Smith, Edgar Rice Burroughs and others were consumed voraciously and whet the imagination!
Then came J.R.R. Tolkien and a membership in the SF Book Club! Decades later I still read SF along with a lot of history, mystery and more! The current authors I enjoy the most are David Weber (Honor Harrington series) and John Ringo, but still have to make time to reread old favorites like the Foundation trilogy, The Mote in God’s Eye or Dune every now and again!
Speaking of old favorites, there was a book called The Survivors (?) I read in my early years that I have not been able to locate. It was a story of a bunch of humans marooned on an unknown planet; trying to survive and redevelop spacefaring technology, in particular a radio for reaching offplanet. There were empathic animals, and dangers galore, that fired my imagination, but I can’t for the life of me remember the author! If anyone has an idea of who it might be I would greatly appreciate it!
Thanks again, Kip!

Chris R.
Reply to  Abolition Man
June 2, 2021 10:32 am

Ah, a Tom Godwin novella, with some truly heart-rending scenes. Godwin’s most famous story was The Cold Equations, which made it into the first volume of the Science Fiction Hall of Fame.

Forrest
June 1, 2021 1:53 pm

I love reading the youth books of Heinlein – one of my favorites is “Citizen of the Galaxy” which shows how people adapt to different rolls and cultural understandings. That ‘normal’ is not so much a point of view as it is a cultural heritage and that whether slave, or ship captains adopted son, or heir to a fortune – the expectations of rolls and how we migrate into them are interesting.

Additionally I think I obtained my Libertarian outlook in part due to Heinlein.
Science Fiction gives us a chance to see how the drama of humans and the lives and lies and hopes that we wield will follow us regardless of the world or worlds we ultimately end up at.

Michael
June 1, 2021 3:20 pm

I read Stranger in a Strange Land in high school. I quite enjoyed it but haven’t read any of his other works. Recommendations would be welcomed. I also, at the time, quite liked the classics like Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 and The Martian Chronicles, Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, and Asimov’s Foundation.

Mark D
Reply to  Michael
June 1, 2021 4:22 pm

You might give “Methuselah’s Children a read and then “Time Enough for Love”

Hank GG
Reply to  Mark D
June 1, 2021 4:51 pm

At first I didn’t grok “Time Enough for Love” and put it down. Same with “Stranger in a Strange Land”. A few years later I tried again and was amazed how great the novels are!

Michael
Reply to  Kip Hansen
June 1, 2021 7:03 pm

Thanks. Will do!

Mark D
June 1, 2021 4:15 pm

Kip if you haven’t read Michael Z. Williamson’s book “Freehold” I think you would really enjoy it. He makes no attempt to hide his respect for RAH and I find “Freehold” to be very rereadable just as I do the Grand Master himself. The entire “Freehold Universe” is very Heinleinien.

Hank GG
June 1, 2021 4:45 pm

Wow, Heinline climate alarmists, Covid fraudsters and Critical Race Theorists.
I’m a baby-boomer and devoured all of Heinline and Asimov.
Thanks for the great post.

Voltron
June 1, 2021 6:26 pm

I came here from Rico’s Roughnecks, and I would like to know more

Chris R.
Reply to  Voltron
June 1, 2021 7:02 pm

Like many here, I was introduced to Heinlein by the seemingly inexhaustible flood of “juveniles” he put out in the 1950s. As a 7th-grader, I discovered them in the school library. I also discovered copies of Analog in the same location. I have been an enthusiastic science-fiction reader ever since.

Heinlein, in my opinion, did his best work in novel form. I won’t say his short stories left me cold: no one with a pulse could fail to be impressed by “Solution: Unsatisfactory”, “Blowups Happen”, or the paired stories “The Main Who Sold the Moon” and “Requiem”.

June 1, 2021 7:51 pm

I found his tumblebug from The Roads Must Roll to be fascinating. I suspect it was an inspiration for Dean Kamen’s Segway.

Craig from Oz
June 1, 2021 8:22 pm

So… is this a good time to discuss the quality and direction of the Hugos?

Reply to  Craig from Oz
June 2, 2021 9:11 am

That does need an article on its won.

Craig from Oz
Reply to  M Courtney
June 2, 2021 7:05 pm

Yes.

Last time I made an effort to read the Hugo short list was in 2019 (that’s back in the Epoch of Travel for you young people. Ask your parents) when I went to Dublin.

Space Opera I had a lot of fun with cause it was basically casual fiction that didn’t take itself too seriously (“what if there was a Space EuroVision?”). Thinking about it now it possible got short listed because one of the human male characters gives birth after having sex with one of the aliens and males giving birth is progressive, stunning and brave… oh well… Look, I had fun with it, okay? 😀

(I also finished reading it while I was very sleep deprived, so maybe the emotional warm fuzzy I got at the time wasn’t completely due to the text… 😛 )

The other books? I think three were openly and proudly ‘feminist author’ and the only other one I tried to read was book three in a series that was basically ‘What if we took all the dull background characters from the actual adventure from Books 1 and 2 and pushed them to center stage?’ End result was several hundred pages of nothing happening broken up by 80 year old same sex couples arguing about ice cream. Didn’t finish.

I think it is pretty clear that in the current climate of Sci Fi literature absolutely NONE of the authors listed in this entire comments section would get short listed for a Hugo.

Rather sad really.

Bill Parsons
June 1, 2021 10:48 pm

Here’s wishing the screenwriters for the recent Netflix space saga “Away” had read the short Heinlein story “Gentlement, Be Seated!” – or maybe were just a bit more science-aware when they wrote their script. In one crisis depicted in the multi-part movie, an astronaut accidentally drills a hole through the skin of their Mars-bound craft and air begins leaking out. Their intrepid female commander knows what must be done: “Everybody out!” she orders. As they evacuate the cabin and close its airtight door the dramatic music swells above the sinister “hiss” of the escaping air.

In the Heinlein story some meteorites punch holes in a lunar colonization module, and his rather inelegant sollution was for his characters to pull down their trousers and sit on them til help could arrive. My 10-year old mind wondered why they weren’t extruded ass-first into space, but Heinlein’s application has been proven The laying on of human flesh received its trial by fire in August of 2018 when astronauts aboard the ISS tracked down a hiss to find a 2 mm leak and Astronaut Alexander Gerst proved stopped the air leak by putting his finger over it. Some tape and epoxy were located and all was well. Nary a panicky crescendo was heard.

https://www.treehugger.com/astronaut-uses-finger-plug-hole-space-station-4866827

DaveW
June 2, 2021 1:21 am

Kip – I think your final quote from Heinlein pretty much matches my experience in science over the more than several decades that I have experienced it. There are the theoreticians who love to speculate on how things may be and are loathe to leave their armchairs. Then there are the people with a lust to know how things work and insist on tinkering until they have some idea, theory be damned. Sadly, theory always seems to have more status than knowledge.

Tom Abbott
June 2, 2021 4:18 am

From the article: “Life-Line in Astounding when it was first published, but I read it twenty years later as a precocious pre-teen-aged boy bent on reading every single science fiction book and every edition of every pulp science fiction magazine that could be found in the main branch of the Los Angeles County Library.  By the time I was 15, I had accomplished that dubiously important feat.”

That sounds like my awakening. I found the Science Fiction section of the library when I was about 11 years old, and I was hooked!

I breathlessly read every science fiction book in the library, and it was a small library and the librarians realized my interests in science fiction, and after I read all the books available, I would notice that about every week or two, there would be three or four new science fiction books to read. It didn’t dawn on me until later that the librarians were feeding me books. God Bless them!

I hung out at a local drug store that had a book section and while eating a hamburger, I would sit there and read the science fiction books they had, and they would allow me to do it.

And then when I got older and had a little money, I subscribed to every science fiction publication available. I shipped hundreds of my old science fiction books and magazines to the troops in Desert Storm.

All those names of writers you mentioned bring back memories. Good memories.

When I finally read all the science fiction books, I started in on the science fact books, the ones about space development. I read about doing it in the science fiction books, and I wanted to learn how to do it in the real world. So that set me off on another reading bender! 🙂

On another subject you are interested in, here is a link:

https://www.wnd.com/2021/05/wnd-facing-existential-threat-can-help/

The radical Left is intent on shutting up their political opponents. This is a direct threat to the freedoms of all of us.

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