Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by martyb on Thursday August 25 2016, @04:04AM   Printer-friendly
from the Pay-it-Forward-/-Grok-/-TANSTAAFL dept.

The Joplin Globe reports that Missouri lawmakers have inducted science fiction writer Robert Heinlein to the Hall of Famous Missourians to a cheering crowd of fans who call themselves "Heinlein's children."

State Rep. T.J. Berry says Heinlein encouraged others to "strive for the stars, for the moon" and "for what's next." Donors to the Heinlein Society and the Heinlein Prize Trust paid for a bronze bust of Heinlein, which will be displayed in the House Chamber at the Capitol where it will join 45 other Missourians honored with busts in the hall including Mark Twain, Dred Scott and Ginger Rogers, as well as more controversial Missourians such as Rush Limbaugh.

"Our devotion to this man must seem odd to those outside of the science fiction field, with spaceships and ray guns and bug-eyed monsters," Heinlein Society President Keith Kato said. "But to Heinlein's children, the writing was only the beginning of doing."


Original Submission

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 3, Informative) by archfeld on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:20AM

    by archfeld (4650) <treboreel@live.com> on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:20AM (#392881) Journal

    I grok why they are honoring him. One of the best and amongst my personal favorite authors ever. I grew up reading his Sci-Fi.
    Have space suit will travel, the moon is a harsh mistress, the number of the beast, job; a comedy of justice, stranger in a strange land, starship troopers, farnhams freehold, methuselah s children just to name a few...
    The world grew dimmer both intellectually and creatively when he passed on. His signature on my copy of Job, a comedy of Justice is one of my treasured belongings.

    --
    For the NSA : Explosives, guns, assassination, conspiracy, primers, detonators, initiators, main charge, nuclear charge
    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Phoenix666 on Thursday August 25 2016, @02:23PM

      by Phoenix666 (552) on Thursday August 25 2016, @02:23PM (#393014) Journal

      I read everything he wrote, too. He was a strange mix of hippie free love (Stranger in a Strange Land, Number of the Beast), rigid militarism (Starship Troopers), and capitalist cheerleading (The Man Who Sold the Moon). Many of his ideas from stories like Friday and Methuselah's Children I carry to this day. His politics were complex and contradictory and didn't really suit me per se, but the key takeaway was his constant insistence on critical, independent thinking, of standing up to every kind of tyranny from the formal, government kind to the mundane, everyday, conventional wisdom kind. Above all he was a real American and not a set of walking talking points, the way so many voices in today's society have become. We could really use him now to pierce the Bullshit and cut the self-aggrandizing down to size.

      --
      Washington DC delenda est.
      • (Score: 1, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:02PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:02PM (#393101)

        ...the key takeaway was his constant insistence on critical, independent thinking...

        Very evident in, "Tramp Royale", the story of their round the world trip. They take their time, sample many different places and cultures, and conclude that there's no place like home (at that time--might be different now?)

        I got the impression that they were well mannered tourists and did not fall into the "ugly American" stereotype.

    • (Score: 2) by martyb on Thursday August 25 2016, @09:49PM

      by martyb (76) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 25 2016, @09:49PM (#393206) Journal

      I grok why they are honoring him. One of the best and amongst my personal favorite authors ever. I grew up reading his Sci-Fi.

      100% agreed. One of my all-time favorite writes, too. Right up there with Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, and Piers Anthony.

      Have space suit will travel, the moon is a harsh mistress, the number of the beast, job; a comedy of justice, stranger in a strange land, starship troopers, farnhams freehold, methuselah s children just to name a few... [Emphasis added]

      One of my all-time favorite stories. A real page turner and investigated a number of social and scientific aspects of life on a moon colony. Did you know that the Internet Archive [archive.org] has a collection of scans of all issues of If Magazine (aka Worlds of If) [archive.org] in which this story first appeared as a serial? See issues: December 1965, January, February, March, April 1966. I had my best luck with the PDFs.

      NOTE: Some of the issues hosted there have been updated to remove certain stories on request of copyright holders. This story was there when I last looked, within a month of the archive being made available. I took a quick look and it appears that the first three installments were there, at least.

      The world grew dimmer both intellectually and creatively when he passed on. His signature on my copy of Job, a comedy of Justice is one of my treasured belongings.

      I share your sentiments on his passing. I have a signed copy of "Anguished English" by Richard Lederer that I similarly treasure.

      Thanks for the memories!

      --
      Wit is intellect, dancing.
      • (Score: 2) by martyb on Thursday August 25 2016, @10:13PM

        by martyb (76) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 25 2016, @10:13PM (#393210) Journal

        BEWARE: I just finished checking the rest of the issues, and it appears that all parts of "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" are there... with one major caveat there is a mixup between issues and files on archive.org!

        https://archive.org/details/1966-03_IF [archive.org] contains the APRIL, 1966 issue

        https://archive.org/details/1966-04_IF [archive.org] contains the MARCH, 1966 issue

        --
        Wit is intellect, dancing.
  • (Score: 2, Disagree) by Gravis on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:27AM

    by Gravis (4596) on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:27AM (#392883)

    Umm... in his later years his writing turned anti-semitic which is what "Starship Troopers" is about, the Nazis wiping out the Jews. Not sure why they are honoring Rush Limbaugh but it must be related to his political works of fiction.

    • (Score: 5, Informative) by archfeld on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:35AM

      by archfeld (4650) <treboreel@live.com> on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:35AM (#392885) Journal

      I realize you have a right to an opinion but I don't see any anti-Semitism in starship trooper, but rather a satirical story about the world under a dominating Federal government that controlled all aspects of life. Want to know more... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein [wikipedia.org]

      '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."[44] Starship Troopers is a coming-of-age story about duty, citizenship, and the role of the military in society.[45] 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.'

      --
      For the NSA : Explosives, guns, assassination, conspiracy, primers, detonators, initiators, main charge, nuclear charge
    • (Score: 2) by jelizondo on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:46AM

      by jelizondo (653) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 25 2016, @05:46AM (#392887) Journal

      They had to choose between Limbaugh and a black man... Rush won unanimously.

      ...ducks...

      ...runs...

    • (Score: 2) by fleg on Thursday August 25 2016, @06:10AM

      by fleg (128) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 25 2016, @06:10AM (#392888)

      "anti-semitic" thats news to me. got a reference? a quick google isnt showing me much.

      • (Score: 3, Insightful) by aristarchus on Thursday August 25 2016, @06:54AM

        by aristarchus (2645) on Thursday August 25 2016, @06:54AM (#392893) Journal

        Takes a bit. Let us see. Hmmmm. Bugs. Our enemy, trashed Rio, bro! But that is the deal, bugs, bug minds, bug ass-blasters, the only thing the understand is superior firepower! Hmm, just like Nazis? Oh, no, they were white, just deranged. Maybe the Japanese, whom some American soldiers described as ants, bugs trying to overwhelm Allied positions. Only option, use the nuke. Does any of this sound familiar? Kind of Racist WWII American Familiar? Oh, how quickly the innocent forget the crimes they are guilty of, on both sides of a conflict. Dougie Howser is a dead give away! As an SS officer? Whose side are you on?

        • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Thursday August 25 2016, @07:55AM

          by FatPhil (863) <reversethis-{if.fdsa} {ta} {tnelyos-cp}> on Thursday August 25 2016, @07:55AM (#392904) Homepage
          Oh, but who are the bad guys? I've always seen it as a satirical criticism of the system more than of the bugs. So if it is referring to nazis/jews (which it isn't particularly, for reasons you seem to touch on) then it's anti-nazi.
          --
          Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves
          • (Score: 3, Insightful) by NotSanguine on Thursday August 25 2016, @09:10AM

            Oh, but who are the bad guys? I've always seen it as a satirical criticism of the system more than of the bugs. So if it is referring to nazis/jews (which it isn't particularly, for reasons you seem to touch on) then it's anti-nazi.

            I don't know about that. I think Heinlein just wanted to bang on about the importance of an electorate who want governance for the common good, (timely now, if you ask me) personal responsibility, and poke those kinder, gentler (don't beat your kids, "we ain't gonna study war no more"), pop-psychology do-gooders in the eye.

            What's more, if the Arachnids had any real Earth analog, it would have been China and the USSR (Starship Troopers was published in 1959, at the height of the cold war).

            More than anything else, Starship Troopers was a thinly-veiled attempt to glorify the military. Hell, when I was a kid, Starship Troopers made me want to join the Marines when I was old enough. Thankfully, I saw the light by the time I was eighteen.

            But then, that's not so surprising, since Heinlein was an Annapolis graduate and a career Navy man.

            --
            No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
            • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Thursday August 25 2016, @10:44AM

              by FatPhil (863) <reversethis-{if.fdsa} {ta} {tnelyos-cp}> on Thursday August 25 2016, @10:44AM (#392941) Homepage
              Ah, OK. I've not read the book, only seen the film. Verhoeven lays it on thick in that one, it's oozing satire from every frame.
              --
              Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves
              • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 25 2016, @03:51PM

                by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 25 2016, @03:51PM (#393073)

                It's one of those movie adaptations where the movie is good, the book is good, but they have little to do with each other except superficial details (other examples that come to mind are What Dreams May Come or I Am Legend's latest film attempt).

                If you haven't seen it yet, Starship Troopers 3: Marauder is worth a watch. It's not Verhoeven, but it does a good enough job capturing the original's tone.

              • (Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Thursday August 25 2016, @07:04PM

                The film, as I and others noted, bears only a cosmetic resemblance to the novel.

                In fact, I found the movie almost nauseating.

                Given that as a reader, I'm the director of my own internal movie, whereas, movie adaptations generally reflect the prejudices and vision of the screenwriters and director.

                Also, such adaptations of novels I've read tend (IMHO) to be quite deficient, since the format doesn't allow for much internal dialogue and usually rip out huge sections which strongly inform the storytelling. In some cases, like Starship Troopers the movie bears little resemblance to the novel.

                Interestingly, the 1994 adaptation [wikipedia.org] of The Puppet Masters [wikipedia.org] was relatively true to the novel.

                --
                No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
                • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Friday August 26 2016, @09:29AM

                  by FatPhil (863) <reversethis-{if.fdsa} {ta} {tnelyos-cp}> on Friday August 26 2016, @09:29AM (#393412) Homepage
                  Certainly, first it can gets mangled through the screenwriter's brain, and then that gets concretised into the director's vision. And in the end, I like the end result of that process in this case.

                  I suspect I'd not get more than 10 pages into the book, if even that much - I'm way too visually stimulated, I want to be pamperred by the full experience created at the hands of professionals, I'm not prepared to invest the effort into creating my own sights and sounds; if I'm doing that, I may as well do the storyline too (and I am a lucid dreamer who can often control and direct my own dreams, so this is sometimes a reality).

                  Not personally appreciating a book doesn't mean that I don't respect Heinlein for his influence in the field, and I am happy that he's being rewarded by this memorial. Artists (from all of the creative fields, from music to visual arts, to literature) are too often under-appreciated. Where's Dick's one? Come on, Illinois, up your game!
                  --
                  Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves
                  • (Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Saturday August 27 2016, @07:36AM

                    I suspect I'd not get more than 10 pages into the book, if even that much - I'm way too visually stimulated, I want to be pamperred by the full experience created at the hands of professionals, I'm not prepared to invest the effort into creating my own sights and sounds; if I'm doing that, I may as well do the storyline too (and I am a lucid dreamer who can often control and direct my own dreams, so this is sometimes a reality).

                    Different strokes for different folks. By all means, don't read the novel. More for me! :)

                    Not personally appreciating a book doesn't mean that I don't respect Heinlein for his influence in the field,

                    I never even considered that you were dissing Heinlein. But now that you bring it up, I considered it, and I see no reason to think you were disrespecting anyone about anything.

                    --
                    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
                    • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Saturday August 27 2016, @02:32PM

                      by FatPhil (863) <reversethis-{if.fdsa} {ta} {tnelyos-cp}> on Saturday August 27 2016, @02:32PM (#393930) Homepage
                      Sure, I was merely clarifying for the skim-reading bystanders, and trying to get back more onto the topic of the story - this monument to honour him.
                      --
                      Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves
            • (Score: 2) by deadstick on Thursday August 25 2016, @01:10PM

              by deadstick (5110) on Thursday August 25 2016, @01:10PM (#392966)

              since Heinlein was an Annapolis graduate and a career Navy man

              Annapolis yes, career no. Tuberculosis ended his Navy service after five years.

        • (Score: 2) by fleg on Thursday August 25 2016, @08:55AM

          by fleg (128) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 25 2016, @08:55AM (#392924)

          >Dougie Howser is a dead give away! As an SS officer?

          yeah but that was the movie, which heinlein being dead, had no say in.

          >Whose side are you on?

          none, just seeking information. i've read a lot of heinlein including his letters in grumbles from the grave and i got no sense of antisemitism.

          • (Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Thursday August 25 2016, @09:29AM

            I'd point out that the movie [wikipedia.org] bore only a passing resemblance to the novel [wikipedia.org], mostly in the name, the names of some characters and the enemy.

            Just about everything that made the novel a good read was cleansed from the movie. And the movie was, predictably, awful.

            --
            No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
        • (Score: 2) by Capt. Obvious on Thursday August 25 2016, @09:27AM

          by Capt. Obvious (6089) on Thursday August 25 2016, @09:27AM (#392930)

          In the book, nukes are used far more liberally, including against civilian populations. They are not a last resort, but a personal weapon every human soldier was equipped with

          • (Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Thursday August 25 2016, @09:45AM

            In the book, nukes are used far more liberally, including against civilian populations. They are not a last resort, but a personal weapon every human soldier was equipped with

            Those aren't the nukes you think they are:

            just then my first rocket hit - that unmistakable (if you've ever seen one) brilliance of an atomic explosion. It was just a peewee, of course, less than two kilotons nominal yield, with tamper and implosion squeeze to produce results from a less-than-critical mass - but then who wants to be bunk mates with a cosmic catastrophe? [emphasis added]

            Note that the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs were 7-10 times more powerful than any "personal weapon every human soldier was equipped with." What's more, I don't have a specific reference, but Heinlein makes it clear that not everyone was allowed to carry even those small tactical nukes.

            So it's a cool story, bro. It would be cooler if it was actually part of the novel.

            --
            No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
            • (Score: 1) by ewk on Thursday August 25 2016, @10:50AM

              by ewk (5923) on Thursday August 25 2016, @10:50AM (#392942)

              There have been times/situations when a personal weapon with even 10 times less the power of a Hiroshima/Nagasaki [whichever was the smallest] would have been handy...
              Hell, I'd even settle for 100 times less! :-)

              --
              I don't always react, but when I do, I do it on SoylentNews
            • (Score: 2) by martyb on Thursday August 25 2016, @06:57PM

              by martyb (76) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 25 2016, @06:57PM (#393136) Journal

              I somehow missed reading Starship Troopers -- it's going on my "gotta read it" list right now.

              As for your bolded text "two Kilotons nominal yield", I'd like to point out just how massive a bomb that is. I grew up in the era of A-Bomb and H-Bomb testing and so I grew used to the use of the terms: kiloton and megaton. Upon reflection, those are huge units of measure!

              A single stick of dynamite is something I do NOT want to be near when it goes off.

              One (short) ton of TNT is 2,000 pounds. So, "two kilotons nominal yield" is, effectively, two-thousand tons, i.e. 4,000,000 pounds (approximately 1,800,000 kg) of TNT!

              Going one more step, according to Wikipedia, TNT [wikipedia.org] has a density of 1.654 g/cm^3. A rough calculation tells me that is a cube of TNT more than 10 meters on each side.

              That's just 2 kiloton; the Tsar Bomba [wikipedia.org] was estimated at 50 megaton:

              ...equivalent to about 1,570 times the combined energy of the bombs that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki,[13] 10 times the combined energy of all the conventional explosives used in World War II,[14] one quarter of the estimated yield of the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa, and 10% of the combined yield of all nuclear tests to date.

              That just totally boggles my mind.

              --
              Wit is intellect, dancing.
              • (Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Thursday August 25 2016, @07:22PM

                Yes, 2 Kilotons of TNT is a big blast. It would be (leaving aside any radiation/fallout issues) about 2/3 he size of The Halifax Explosion [wikipedia.org] in 1917.

                This article [wikipedia.org] gives a good overview of the destructive power of varying amounts of TNT equivalents -- with examples.

                My point to GP was not that two kilotons was *small*, but rather that the weapons described in the novel aren't what we would normally think of when someone mentioned "nuclear weapons," but rather something with enormously less destructive capability than what folks generally think about when someone uses that term [wikipedia.org].

                --
                No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
                • (Score: 2) by martyb on Thursday August 25 2016, @08:08PM

                  by martyb (76) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 25 2016, @08:08PM (#393164) Journal

                  Thanks for the link! Apparently, I made a mistake in my assumption that a kiloton was 2,000 pounds of TNT; apparently, from your link [wikipedia.org], it's 1,000 kg, or closer to 2,200 pounds. Later on that page, they state: "A kiloton of TNT can be visualized as a cube of TNT 8.46 metres (27.8 ft) on a side." Learned something new today — thanks again!

                  --
                  Wit is intellect, dancing.
            • (Score: 2) by Capt. Obvious on Saturday August 27 2016, @07:15AM

              by Capt. Obvious (6089) on Saturday August 27 2016, @07:15AM (#393876)

              And each individual soldier had a dozen of them. So, you know, enough to level a city plus.

              • (Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Saturday August 27 2016, @07:31AM

                And each individual soldier had a dozen of them. So, you know, enough to level a city plus.

                Please provide a reference for that in the novel. I don't recall that at all. IIRC, different suits (marauder, scout, command) had different levels of armor and armaments. Also, I don't recall anyone having more than a couple of those rockets. That's not to say they weren't heavily armed.

                I'm really not sure what difference it makes. Given that it's fiction and that it was written during a time when "duck and cover" was considered adequate protection against nuclear weapons, not to mention that just about everyone was pretty sure they were about to be vaporized or die a slow, painful death from radiation poisoning Any Day Now™, I don't really see what the big deal is. Historical context is important, as is the (and I'll repeat it) fictional setting.

                --
                No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 25 2016, @02:21PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 25 2016, @02:21PM (#393011)

          It sounds like you have seen the movie, not read the book.
          This kind of commentary is like someone seeing Judge Dredd with Stallone and deciding that the comic book wasnt a tale of authoritarianism and a parody of our society.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 25 2016, @10:25AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 25 2016, @10:25AM (#392939)

      Nah, the guy was a military brat that never got to see actual combat. And thus he continually fawned over rigid chains of command etc. Damn it, he laid out his house like it was the deck of a navy ship.

    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Thursday August 25 2016, @06:49PM

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 25 2016, @06:49PM (#393131) Journal
      The obvious rebuttal is that Starship Troopers is not a work of his later years, that Heinlein's racism of his earlier years was far, far more pronounced than anything he had in later years, and that Heinlein explicitly took care to make books with diverse cast of protagonists early on, including Jews. But I guess blatant racism against Chinese and Indians in Sixth Column [wikipedia.org] or blacks in Farnham's Freehold [wikipedia.org] (which was published after Starship Troopers) isn't important while imaginary antisemitism is.

      And there's this letter [tor.com] of Heinlein written on or prior to 1948:

      I have deliberately selected a boy of Scotch-English pioneer ancestry, a boy whose father is a German immigrant, and a boy who is American Jewish. Having selected this diverse background they are then developed as American boys without reference to their backgrounds. You may run into an editor who does not want one of the young heroes to be Jewish. I will not do business with such a firm. The ancestry of the three boys is a “must” and the book is offered under those conditions. My interest was aroused in this book by the opportunity to show to kids what I conceive to be Americanism. The use of a diverse group . . . is part of my intent; it must not be changed. . . . I am as disinterested as a referee but I want to get over an object lesson in practical democracy.

      "Diverse" here meaning no girls, among many other things, but it is still remarkable that a decade before your alleged antisemitism, Heinlein wrote sci fi with an explicit Jewish protagonist.

      Personally, I think this shows the paltriness of an outlook that classifies people by their beliefs in racism. Even at Heinlein's worst, he still knew how to write an engaging story.

      • (Score: 3, Interesting) by mcgrew on Thursday August 25 2016, @08:56PM

        by mcgrew (701) <publish@mcgrewbooks.com> on Thursday August 25 2016, @08:56PM (#393179) Homepage Journal

        You have to realize that during most of Heinlein's life almost every American was racist, no matter what race they were. We simply didn't know each other; I was five when I saw my first black man because America was segregated. Even as late as 1972 when I was in the service (I doubt anyone who's been in the military is bigoted) I was at a black friend's brother's apartment in Baltimore at a party and needed cigarettes. A girl there told me she'd take me to get some.

        We walked down the street maybe three blocks and she said to give her the quarter to get them because I couldn't go in.

        "Why not?"

        "They'll kill you!"

        Times have really changed in the last half century. For the better. Anyone who wants the "good old days" has a really bad memory.

        --
        mcgrewbooks.com mcgrew.info nooze.org
  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 26 2016, @07:39PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 26 2016, @07:39PM (#393645)

    Will they find a spiritual successor of Rodin to craft it, though?