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Robert A. Heinlein: In Dialogue with His Century, Vol. 2- The Man Who Learned Better, 1948-1988 Hardcover – June 3, 2014

ISBN-13: 978-0765319616 ISBN-10: 0765319616 Edition: 1st

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 672 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books; 1st edition (June 3, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765319616
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765319616
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.4 x 2.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #74,527 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

*Starred Review* This second volume of the authorized biography of arguably the most notable American science-fiction writer covers the second half of his life. In these years, Heinlein was continually exploring new approaches to old sf themes and then pushing the boundaries of the entire field steadily outward with new themes. This phase of his career began with Stranger in a Strange Land (more than 10 years in gestation) and continued to the end of his life. During that period, he battled censorship by stuffy editors, Hollywood directors of questionable ethics, and overly zealous or downright incompetent critics. He also battled a series of health problems that make harrowing reading, and that would probably have had most of us bedridden at an age when Heinlein was taking a cruise through the Arctic’s Northwest Passage. In all his enterprises, he was indispensably partnered with the remarkable Virginia Heinlein, wife, helpmate, organizer, business manager, corresponding secretary, and altogether worthy of a biography in her own right. As is inevitable in an authorized biography, some controversial subjects (such as Heinlein’s politics and his classic Starship Troopers) are presented in the most favorable light, but author Patterson also presents strong, fact-based cases for those interpretations. The research for this biography was clearly both a labor of love and a labor of Hercules, and the result is what must be considered the standard for biographies of a man who in turn must finally be considered a major American writer. --Roland Green

About the Author

WILLIAM H. PATTERSON was a lifelong devotee of the works of Robert A. Heinlein, and was chosen by Virginia Heinlein to write Robert Heinlein's official biography. He died on April 22, 2014.

Customer Reviews

Great read for the die-hard Heinlein fan.
Binay
The lack of a *detailed* index makes it difficult to go back and find earlier passages, though -- so it's harder to piece together the Heinlein puzzle.
Avid Political Junkie
In any case there is an enormous amount of information, much of it new at least to me, carefully compiled and well presented.
Al Hence

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

23 of 23 people found the following review helpful By Al Hence on June 7, 2014
Format: Hardcover
The late William H. Patterson Jr. was a long-time associate of Robert Heinlein's wife Virginia and first president of the Heinlein Society. Apparently for this reason he was appointed Robert's official biographer by Mrs. Heinlein. The result is a wonderful book for anyone with a deep interest in the lives of Robert (RAH) and Virginia. Others may find it hard going. Some people that claim to be knowledgeable in the field assert there is not much new here. OK, if you say so. That may even be true, at least in general terms. In any case there is an enormous amount of information, much of it new at least to me, carefully compiled and well presented. But the chronological organization means that it is scattered among a wealth of trivial, irrelevant and uninteresting stuff. Even the most enthusiastic fans may not be thrilled at wading through pages of material on Heinlein's adventures in homebuilding and various tourist trips.

That said, there is a great deal of worthwhile material on Heinlein's writing process, intentions and attitudes. Patterson details the process by which RAH became not merely a (perhaps "the") leading author of science fiction but escaped the genre to become one of the leading American novelists of the twentieth century. Since most of this material comes from Virginia, directly or indirectly, naturally it gives her a leading role.

The index has some problems. It includes some very minor points (RAH sometimes referred to Colorado Springs as "scissorbill town") while ignoring major ones (the "Opus" list or system that Virginia used to catalog her husbands work in-progress, mentioned several times in the text). There are also a number of minor errors - e.g. Alan Shepard was not the first American to orbit the earth. That was John Glenn.

Overall, a great book for Heinlein enthusiasts, not so much for those with only a casual interest.
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful By Avid Political Junkie on June 17, 2014
Format: Hardcover
Patterson pulls a lot information together, and from it he cobbles up a detailed description of Heinlein's life. Where this biography fails is where the footnotes fail. Patterson in many places makes assertions about Heinlein's beliefs and opinions without backing them up with quotes from Heinlein. The discussion of Finland's national character vs. the national character of the Baltic states comes immediately to mind. Heinlein had things to say about both (Finland: positive; Baltic States: negative), but Patterson jumps to a broader conclusion of how they fit into Heinlein's philosophy without any reference to primary sources. Heinlein *may* have thought these things, but then again he may not have. Heinlein has always defied the categories assigned to him. The people who love Ayn Rand think of him as a Randian fellow traveller (except that it's clear he didn't think much of Rand). Because of his staunch anti-communist views the Right thinks of him as one of their own (except that he was against conscription, he thought that Joe McCarthy was dangerous, and he stood down the local Republican committee on letting blacks into the organization). The people make a religion out of science feel that Heinlein was Mr Hard Science (and in many ways he was, except he believed in psychic abilities, and he wrote about a ghost who inhabited the house he and Leslyn shared -- this is not card carrying rational materialist). Patterson pigeonholes him as an early brand of Libertarian (but Heinlein believed that warfare was necessary and that government had a purpose). Like many of Heinlein's fans, I think Patterson sees what he wants to in Heinlein -- and he's subtly weighted the narrative of Heinlein's intellectual development to his own views.

Likewise, Patterson doesn't engage with Heinlein's critics.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful By Lars D. Hedbor on June 14, 2014
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Reading this unusually approachable literary biography of a writer whose influence on my own approach to life is probably second only to that of my parents, I am struck by how many times something clicked and a connection I'd never before suspected snapped into place.

Heinlein's life would be intrinsically interesting, even if I weren't a fan of his work, and Patterson gave me the opportunity to come to know the man behind the stories, and to understand how his experiences might have informed the stories that had shaped my life.

The ending of the book, as with all biographies, was no surprise, and yet I found myself weeping anew as I read it, both for The loss of Robert Heinlein, and also for the more recent loss of his biographer. Patterson has left a worthy legacy for all of us who love Heinlein's work and passions and I am sorry that we will not be able to further enjoy his company as we toast absent friends.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful By tbyg on June 8, 2014
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
This is the kind of detail I, a Heinlein fanatic, appreciate. Mr. McCrary's review of Starship Troopers, it would appear, is the source of the scene from - I forget which book - in which literary critics can escape a room only if they can read. This is the kind of thing I want to know. As the first reviewer said, it may be just for Heinlein fanatics. Then again, maybe not. I feel there is a lot to be learned from both his works and his life.

*********

Subtracting a star as I go along - as one of the one-star reviewers said, the commentary gets (real) old. I'm still enjoying the book for the purpose of finding out details I did not know before.
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