Showing posts with label Robert Heinlein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Heinlein. Show all posts

Saturday, February 21, 2015

eBook Review: Starship Troopers


St59.jpg

Robert HeinleinStarship Troopers 

  • Product Details

    • File Size: 529 KB
    • Print Length: 292 pages
    • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0441014100
    • Publisher: Ace (May 15, 1987)
    • Sold by: Penguin Group (USA) LLC
    • Language: English
    • ASIN: B004EYTK2C
    • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
    • X-Ray: Not Enabled
    • Word Wise: Not Enabled
    • Lending: Not Enabled (a pisser) 
    • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars (1,378 customer reviews)
    • Price: $6.52 (odd price) 

1. Short review: *:D big grin (Amazon rating: 5 out of 5 stars -- I love it. I have read Starship Troopers at least six times and enjoyed every reading.)

2. Long review:
2.1. What I liked: Extraordinary for its readability. The writing pulls the reader along. Even when Heinlein lectures through the voice of Johnny Rico, you want to read more. At least I did.
Roller-coaster or walk-in-the-park? A walk in the park punctuated with roller coasters.
Worth my money. Worth yours, too. If you are a writer, even if you disagree with Heinlein's opinion of soldiers, you should study this book to improve your craft.
(The cover at top is not the current one. I believe it is the cover for the first printing.)

2.2. What I did not like: There are at least four things wrong with Starship Troopers:
1. The flogging;
2. The Mobile Infantry's march pace;
3. The use of Cadet Byrd as an instructor; and
4. The result of the appeal of the court martial of William Sitgreaves Cox of the USS Chesapeake.
     1. The flogging.
     While leading a platoon in a training exercise, Johnny violates the operating procedures. For this infraction, he is flogged. It is made clear in the book that this is lenient and that he could have been court-martialed and discharged.
     When I read this the first time as a kid, I thought this was harsh. Now I think it is insane.
     If a guy busts a training exercise, you don't flog him. You downcheck him, scream at him, and make him do it again until he gets it right. Maybe you fail him on that part of the syllabus and wash him back to the next class.
     But you do not flog him.

     2. The Mobile Infantry's march pace.
     Heinlein states the MI's march pace is 140 paces to the minute. This is the pace of a show band.
     The US Army marches at a quicktime pace of 120. That means six paces covers five yards.
     Show bands march 140 paces to the minute or faster. Their paces are shorter: eight paces to five yards.
     The French Army marches at a pace of 116. The French Foreign Legion marches at a crawl of 88. That is why they are always the last in parades.
     For the Roman army, I calculated a pace of 132. That is fast but do-able.
     Could a military unit march at 140 paces a minute? In full kit? I doubt it.

     3. The use of Cadet Byrd as an instructor.
     At OCS, Cadet Byrd is used as an instructor in mathematics while he studies the other subjects.
     Really?
     Before Cadet Byrd entered OCS, the school must have had a mathematics instructor. What became of him?
     Plus, how does Cadet Byrd find time to complete his other studies and prepare for and teach classes and grade the homework and tests of other cadets?
     OCS is first and foremost a lesson in time pressure. In my experience, the schedule consumed 28 hours a day. How do you get it done when you are always short of time?
     This is not credible. It guarantees that Byrd would fail.

     4. The result of the appeal of the court martial of William Sitgreaves Cox of the USS Chesapeake.
     In the book, Colonel Nielssen says that a third lieutenant was convicted for deserting his post as commanding officer in the presence of the enemy and that his family tried for a hundred and fifty years to overturn the conviction without success.
     That is false.
     It is true that William Cox was court-martialed and convicted for exactly that charge and that his family sought to overturn the conviction for generations. It is false that they did not succeed. They did succeed.
     William Cox's conviction was overturned by an act of Congress in 1952 and signed into law by President Harry Truman. Cox was posthumously reinstated to the rank of third lieutenant.
     It is possible that Heinlein was unaware that Cox's conviction was overturned, but ignorance of such an extraordinary act of reinstatement is so unlikely that it is beyond the bounds of credibility.
     On this point, Heinlein used authorial license in full.

     I shall not treat with the form of government in Starship Troopers nor with the unified world government. Those are just stage props that serve as background for the story.

2.3. Who I think is the audience: Science fiction fans. Heinlein fans.

2.4. Is the book appropriate for children to read?  Yes. Should be required reading for 14-year old boys.
     Once Starship Troopers was in the Marine Corps Commandant's Professional Reading List (Primary Level; that is, E1, E2,E3). It has been replaced by Ender's Game. In my opinion, that is a big mistake.
     I do not know who thought that Ender's Game would build better Marines than Starship Troopers, but he thought wrong. I read every version of Ender's Game published from the original novella to the overpadded novel. None of the instances of Ender's Game measures up to Starship Troopers.

2.5. On the basis of reading this book, will I buy the author's next book? Oh, yeah. Definitely.

2.6. The work in a nutshell:
     Starship Troopers starts in the middle of the story with a prologue that is labeled Chapter One. This prologue/chapter introduces us to Powered Armor by means of a raid by Rasczak's Roughnecks on the Skinnies. It also introduces the main character, Johnny Rico.
     Chapter Two begins at the beginning with Rico's graduation from high school and enlistment in federal service.
     A pause to explain the significance of federal service in Johnny Rico's world.
     In Johnny's world, the Earth is unified under one government. People are born taxpayers and may become citizens through a term of federal service. Citizens may vote and hold public office. Taxpayers may not. Note that during the term of federal service, an individual is not considered a citizen. Thus this is government of the veteran, by the veteran, and for the veteran. 
Johnny completes his training in the Mobile Infantry (MI) at Camp Arthur Currie, one of 187 graduates out of an incoming class of 2,009. (This means MI training has a higher attrition rate than US Navy Seal training.) While he was in training, the Bugs nuked Buenos Aires. In a letter from his aunt, Johnny finds his mother was in BA shopping at the time and was killed. Johnny joins Willie's Wildcats for Operation Bughouse, an assault on the Bugs' home world. This goes badly for the MI, and they evacuate in a rout.
     Johnny soldiers on and gets tagged for Officer Candidate School. When he enters the school, he runs into his father who has also joined the MI. His father ships off to combat while Johnny goes through officer training. The MI require a professional tour (combat) prior to graduation. Johnny makes his in Operation Royalty, a bid to capture a Bug Brain. (This is the third and final combat action in the Starship Troopers.)
     At the end of the penultimate chapter we learn that Johnny is Filipino. This may seem 'meh' now, but when Starship Troopers was published in 1959 the use of a non-white hero was unheard of. (This is also one of the many reasons I hate the movie so much; it used a whiter-than-white lead to play Johnny Rico. "[A]ll the non-Anglo characters from the book have been replaced by characters who look like they stepped out of the Aryan edition of GQ." --Christopher Weuve)
     In the final chapter, we find that Johnny has taken command of his old unit which is now called Rico's Roughnecks. His father is his platoon sergeant. His unit is preparing to drop onto the Bug home world for the final assault. 

2.7. Other:
     Heinlein's story was first published as a serial in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction under the title Starship Soldier. F&SF has probably published more Nebula and Hugo award winners than any other magazine. I could verify that, but I'm not gonna. Not right now anyway. 
     Okay, we all know about the movie and what an abomination that was. In my opinion, the movie got everything -- and I mean everything -- wrong and nothing right. I hate it. I was disappointed but not surprised that Hollywood botched the movie. They also made a clusterfyck of Ender's Game.
     A big surprise was the CGI animated television series Roughnecks: Starship Trooper Chronicles. The time frame for the series is during the Bug War after the Skinnies have switched sides. The series uses the Bugs from the movie but otherwise adheres closely to Heinlein's vision of the MI. I recommend Roughnecks

     Starship Troopers is in fact a polemic disguised as a novel. 

     When Heinlein wrote Starship Troopers, his contract was with Scribner's. He presented them with Starship Troopers as his final juvenile. Scribner's refused it. I do not know what happened with Heinlein's contract, and all those who did know are dead, but Heinlein left Scribner's and published Starship Troopers with Putnam's. 

     You can think what you want about the ideas Heinlein glorifies in Starship Troopers, but this book is fun to read. Years ago, I started to study the book in order to model my writing after Heinlein. I got so caught up in the story that I finished the book without making a single note. I read it again immediately to get the study done. 
     Joe Haldeman disagreed with Heinlein's theme but admitted "it's a very well crafted novel." 
     From the perspective of a reader, Starship Troopers is one of the three best novels in the genre of science fiction. 

     I do not understand the arguments of many that Robert Heinlein was racist. The hero of Starship Troopers is Filipino. The hero of Tunnel in the Sky is black. Only an ignorant idiot would argue that Heinlein was racist. 

(I promised to write a post about grip on a straight razor. Found out my camera will not work. Don't know why. I pray I only need to replace the battery. The post on grip is coming once I can figure out a way to take pictures and video and download them to my computer. Stand by.) 

YMMV.

2.8. Links: Robert A. Heinlein
The Heinlein Society

2.9. Buy the book: Starship Troopers

Sunday, August 12, 2012

eBook Review: Have Spacesuit Will Travel




Robert A. Heinlein, Have Spacesuit Will Travel

Product Details from Baen's Books

Published 6/12/1987
SKU: 9781416505525
Ebook Price: $6.00

1. Short review:  (Amazon rating: 4 out of 5 stars -- I like it.)

2. Long review:
2.1. What I liked:  The writing. Heinlein wrote well.
Roller-coaster or walk-in-the-park? A thoughtful yet scary roller coaster.

2.2. What I did not like: Does not apply.

2.3. Who I think is the audience: Science-fiction fans. RAH fans. YA.

2.4. Is the book appropriate for children to read?  Yes. No worries.

2.5. On the basis of reading this book, will I buy the author's next book?  Yes.

2.6. The plot in a nutshell <<SPOILERS>>:
     Plot summary at Wikipedia
 2.7. Other:
     This story was first serialized in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1958. Scribner's & Sons released the hardback that same year.
     This was the last Heinlein juvenile -- what we call YA today.
     Have Spacesuit Will Travel is included in the collection linked to. It is a bargain: six Heinlein novels for $6.

2.8. Links: 

2.9. Buy the book:  Have Spacesuit Will Travel

Sunday, April 29, 2012

eBook Review: Citizen of the Galaxy



Robert A. Heinlein, Citizen of the Galaxy

Product Details from Baen's Books

Published 6/12/1987
SKU: 9781416505525
Ebook Price: $6.00 
    1. Short review: 

    2. Long review:
    2.1. What I liked:  Robert Heinlein's masterly writing. Hemingway, Steinbeck, Clavell, and Heinlein were the best writers of the 20th century.
    Roller-coaster or walk-in-the-park? Both and both are equally engrossing.
    This book gives outstanding value for your money. It was first published in 1957 as a Serial in Astounding. Later that year, Scribner published the hardback and marketed it as a juvenile (with a first edition cover that really, really sucked).

    2.2. What I did not like:  Does not apply.

    2.3. Who I think is the audience:  SF fans. YA, especially boys.

    2.4. Is the book appropriate for children to read?  Yes.

    2.5. On the basis of reading this book, will I buy the author's next book?  Yes.

    2.6. Other:  I'm not going to tell you about Citizen of the Galaxy, except to say that the Baen's Books version contains a number of other Heinlein works; six novels for six bucks on your choice of platform. No better book deal exists.

    I'm going to tell you about Robert A. Heinlein.

    I love to read Heinlein. His work is easy to read. I read a number of books concurrently (15 books and 1 magazine right now), so I constantly have opportunities to compare writers' work. Heinlein always stands above the others.

    I recall one day I came across comments about Heinlein in IO9. Two young morons calling the Grandmaster a racist 'cause they had read Heinlein's Farnham's Freehold and decided that the book cast blacks in an unfavorable light. I was furious. I have not read IO9 since. I will not read any blog that perpetrates slander against a great man.

    Let me ask you something.

    Have you read Heinlein's Tunnel in the Sky? Word is that Heinlein wrote Tunnel in the Sky as an answer to Lord of the Flies. It was published in 1955, when segregation was still the law in many states. The hero of the book, Rod Walker, was black. Heinlein's publisher wanted to change Walker's race to white -- times being what they were -- but Heinlein threatened to withdraw the book. The editor carefully expunged all references to Walker's race, but there remain clues in the book. Robert James says there is a letter -- likely Heinlein's letter to his editor -- in which Heinlein explicitly stated that Walker was black. And Virginia Heinlein always said that Walker was black.

    Have you read Heinlein's Starship Troopers? I don't mean the terrible movie they made of it with the whitebread Johnny Rico. I mean the book. Juan Rico, aka Johnny, is Filipino. Definitely. Beyond question.

    The two morons who spread defamation on IO9 are racists. They judge people by different standards based on race. 'Thou shalt not write a book that holds evil may live in the hearts of black people, lest we spit upon thee and call thee nasty names. But, yeah, verily, thou mayest write the same of white people for the Lord knows their fathers have committed iniquities for which they shall pay even unto the seventh generation. Excepting those who mouth our righteous platitudes, of course.'

    Heinlein was a man. He judged men as The Reverend Dr Martin Luther King, Jr, judged:  by the content of their character. Heinlein saw in all men flights of angels and mutterings of demons. He knew some would win the struggle and others would lose.

    And he knew that race made no difference.

    Do yourself the biggest favor you will do this year:  buy this book.

    2.7. Links:  The Heinlein Society

    2.8. Buy the book:  Citizen of the Galaxy
    ____________________

    Sunday, August 7, 2011

    Sunday eBook Review: The Rolling Stones



    Robert Heinlein, The Rolling Stones

    Product Details from Baen's Books
    Published 3/1/2009
    SKU: 1416591494
    Ebook Price: $6.00

    1. Short review: 

    2. Long review:
    2.1. What I liked: The Rolling Stones is a classic science fiction juvenile; that is, a book that in today's lingo is called a YA.
    Roller-coaster or walk-in-the-park? Roller coaster.
    This book gives great value for your money.

    2.2. What I did not like: A couple of typos. That is literal: two typos.

    2.3. Who I think is the audience: Young science fiction fans.

    2.4. Is the book appropriate for children to read? Yes.

    2.5. On the basis of reading this book, will I buy the author's next book? Yes.

    2.6. Other: Robert and Virginia Heinlein had no children, and that fact shows in this book.  The Stones have four children: the twins, Castor and Pollux; one daughter, Meade; and a four-year-old, called Buster or Lowell, depending on who is doing the calling. 
    Castor and Pollux are bright.  Too bright.  These kids work out orbital mechanics that I would labor over, and one of my degrees is in mathematics, and I used to do math professionally for the Air Force.  These kids don't misbehave.  They define precocious.
    Meade does little besides cook badly.
    Buster beats his grandmother at chess and otherwise is nothing more than added mass to boost to Mars and the asteroids.  Well, he does a little more, but his character hasn't a tenth of the depth of the grandmother.  Come to think of it, neither does the mother, Dr Stone, have much depth.
    The book was written for teenage boys; a condensed version was published in installments in Boys' Life magazine, the magazine of the Boy Scouts of America.  Thus, it was slanted to Castor and Pollux to give its intended audience major characters to identify with.

    2.7. Links:
    Baen's Books, The Rolling Stones

    2.8. Buy the book: Baen's Books, The Rolling Stones