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The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress Paperback – June 15, 1997
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Print length384 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherOrb Books
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Publication dateJune 15, 1997
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Dimensions5.5 x 0.96 x 8.25 inches
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ISBN-100312863551
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ISBN-13978-0312863555
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Lexile measure900
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About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
ONE
That Dinkum Thinkum
I see in Lunaya Pravdathat Luna City Council has passed on first reading a bill to examine, license, inspect--and tax--public food vendors operating inside municipal pressure. I see also is to be mass meeting tonight to organize “Sons of Revolution” talk-talk.
My old man taught me two things: “Mind own business” and “Always cut cards.” Politics never tempted me. But on Monday 13 May 2075 I was in computer room of Lunar Authority Complex, visiting with computer boss Mike while other machines whispered among themselves. Mike was not official name; I had nicknamed him for Mycroft Holmes, in a story written by Dr. Watson before he founded IBM. This story character would just sit and think--and that’s what Mike did. Mike was a fair dinkum thinkum, sharpest computer you’ll ever meet.
Not fastest. At Bell Labs, Bueno Aires, down Earthside, they’ve got a thinkum a tenth his size which can answer almost before you ask. But matters whether you get answer in microsecond rather than millisecond as long as correct?
Not that Mike would necessarily give right answer; he wasn’t completely honest.
When Mike was installed in Luna, he was pure thinkum, a flexible logic--”High-Optional, Logical, Multi-Evaluating Supervisor, Mark IV, Mod. L”--a HOLMES FOUR. He computed ballistics for pilotless freighters and controlled their catapult. This kept him busy less than one percent of time and Luna Authority never believed in idle hands. They kept hooking hardware into him--decision-action boxes to let him boss other computers, bank on bank of additional memories, more banks of associational neural nets, another tubful of twelve-digit random numbers, a greatly augmented temporary memory. Human brain has around ten-to-the-tenth neurons. By third year Mike had better than one and a half times that number of neuristors.
And woke up.
Am not going to argue whether a machine can “really” be alive, “really” be self-aware. Is a virus self-aware? Nyet. How about oyster? I doubt it. A cat? Almost certainly. A human? Don’t know about you, tovarishch, but Iam. Somewhere along evolutionary chain from macromolecule to human brain self-awareness crept in. Psychologists assert it happens automatically whenever a brain acquires certain very high number of associational paths. Can’t see it matters whether paths are protein or platinum.
(“Soul?” Does a dog have a soul? How about cockroach?)
Remember Mike was designed, even before augmented, to answer questions tentatively on insufficient data like you do; that’s “high-optional” and “multi-evaluating” part of name. So Mike started with “free will” and acquired more as he was added to and as he learned--and don’t ask me to define “free will.” If comforts you to think of Mike as simply tossing random numbers in air and switching circuits to match, please do.
By then Mike had voder-vocoder circuits supplementing his read-outs, print-outs, and decision-action boxes, and could understand not only classic programming but also Loglan and English, and could accept other languages and was doing technical translating--and reading endlessly. But in giving him instructions was safer to use Loglan. If you spoke English, results might be whimsical; multi-valued nature of English gave option circuits too much leeway.
And Mike took on endless new jobs. In May 2075, besides controlling robot traffic and catapult and giving ballistic advice and/or control for manned ships, Mike controlled phone system for all Luna, same for Luna-Terra voice & video, handled air, water, temperature, humidity, and sewage for Luna City, Novy Leningrad, and several smaller warrens (not Hong Kong in Luna), did accounting and payrolls for Luna Authority, and, by lease, same for many firms and banks.
Some logics get nervous breakdowns. Overloaded phone system behaves like frightened child. Mike did not have upsets, acquired sense of humor instead. Low one. If he were a man, you wouldn’t dare stoop over. His idea of thigh-slapper would be to dump you out of bed--or put itch powder in pressure suit.
Not being equipped for that, Mike indulged in phony answers with skewed logic, or pranks like issuing pay cheque to a janitor in Authority’s Luna City office for AS-$10,000,000,000,000,185.15--last five digits being correct amount. Just a great big overgrown lovable kid who ought to be kicked.
He did that first week in May and I had to troubleshoot. I was a private contractor, not on Authority’s payroll. You see--or perhaps not; times have changed. Back in bad old days many a con served his time, then went on working for Authority in same job, happy to draw wages. But I was born free.
Makes difference. My one grandfather was shipped up from Joburg for armed violence and no work permit, other got transported for subversive activity after Wet Firecracker War. Maternal grandmother claimed she came up in bride ship--but I’ve seen records; she was Peace Corps enrollee (involuntary), which means what you think: juvenile delinquency female type. As she was in early clan marriage (Stone Gang) and shared six husbands with another woman, identity of maternal grandfather open to question. But was often so and I’m content with grandpappy she picked. Other grandmother was Tatar, born near Samarkand, sentenced to “re-education” on Oktyabrskaya Revolyutsiya, then “volunteered” to colonize in Luna.
My old man claimed we had even longer distinguished line--ancestress hanged in Salem for witchcraft, a g’g’g’great-grandfather broken on wheel for piracy, another ancestress in first shipload to Botany Bay.
Proud of my ancestry and while I did business with Warden, would never go on his payroll. Perhaps distinction seems trivial since I was Mike’s valet from day he was unpacked. But mattered to me. I could down tools and tell them go to hell.
Besides, private contractor paid more than civil service rating with Authority. Computermen scarce. How many Loonies could go Earthside and stay out of hospital long enough for computer school?--even if didn’t die.
I’ll name one. Me. Had been down twice, once three months, once four, and got schooling. But meant harsh training, exercising in centrifuge, wearing weights even in bed--then I took no chances on Terra, never hurried, never climbed stairs, nothing that could strain heart. Women--didn’t even thinkabout women; in that gravitational field it was no effort not to.
But most Loonies never tried to leave The Rock--too risky for any bloke who’d been in Luna more than weeks. Computermen sent up to install Mike were on short-term bonus contracts--get job done fast before irreversible physiological change marooned them four hundred thousand kilometers from home.
But despite two training tours I was not gung-ho computermen; higher maths are beyond me. Not really electronics engineer, nor physicist. May not have been best micromachinist in Luna and certainly wasn’t cybernetics psychologist.
But I knew more about all these than a specialist knows--I’m general specialist. Could relieve a cook and keep orders coming or field-repair your suit and get you back to airlock still breathing. Machines like me and I have something specialists don’t have: my left arm.
You see, from elbow down I don’t have one. So I have a dozen left arms, each specialized, plus one that feels and looks like flesh. With proper left arm (number-three) and stereo loupe spectacles I could make untramicrominiature repairs that would save unhooking something and sending it Earthside to factory--for number-three has micromanipulators as fine as those used by neurosurgeons.
So they sent for me to find out why Mike wanted to give away ten million billion Authority Scrip dollars, and fix it before Mike overpaid somebody a mere ten thousand.
I took it, time plus bonus, but did not go to circuitry where fault logically should be. Once inside and door locked I put down tools and sat down. “Hi, Mike.”
He winked lights at me. “Hello, Man.”
“What do you know?”
He hesitated. I know--machines don’t hesitate. But remember, Mike was designed to operate on incomplete data. Lately he had reprogrammed himself to put emphasis on words; his hesitations were dramatic. Maybe he spent pauses stirring random numbers to see how they matched his memories.
“’In the beginning,‘” Mike intoned, “’God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness wasupon the face of the deep. And--’”
“Hold it!” I said. “Cancel. Run everything back to zero.” Should have known better than to ask wide-open question. He might read out entire Encyclopaedia Britannica. Backwards. Then go on with every book in Luna. Used to be he could read only microfilm, but late ‘74 he got a new scanning camera with suction-cup waldoes to handle paper and then he read everything.
“You asked what I knew.” His binary read-out lights rippled back and forth--a chuckle. Mike could laugh with voder, a horrible sound, but reserved that for something really funny, say a cosmic calamity.
“Should have said,“ I went on, “’What do you know that’s new?’ But don’t read out today’s papers; that was a friendly greeting, plus invitation to tell me anything you think would interest me. Otherwise null program.”
Mike mulled this. He was weirdest mixture of unsophisticated baby and wise old man. No instincts (well, don’t thinkhe could have had), no inborn traits, no human rearing, no experience in human sense--and more stored data than a platoon of geniuses.
“Jokes?” he asked.
...
Product details
- Publisher : Orb Books; 1st edition (June 15, 1997)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 384 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0312863551
- ISBN-13 : 978-0312863555
- Lexile measure : 900
- Item Weight : 12.3 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.96 x 8.25 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#219,679 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #7,421 in Epic Fantasy (Books)
- #18,399 in Science Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Top reviews from the United States
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Must have been scanned and published without proofreading as it has many typos that would confuse a reader unfamiliar with this great book.
Five stars for the paperback or hard cover. Just two for the Kindle version.
How about proofreading/editing before you sell this any more.
There ain't no such thing as a free book. TANSTAAFB. I pay for it.
Unfortunately, it contains quite a few typos typical of an OCR scan. While this might be expected in amateur publications, I get tired of it from major publishing houses. Is it that hard to proof an e-book when the conversion is done?
After reading some of the other (bad) reviews, I wanted the point out that the book is written from the first person by someone who speaks broken English, living in a time and place where the main language was broken English. It is meant as part of the setting, but might be an issue if you can't see past it. But if you can, the story is well worth it!
And his imaginary future, now just 50 years away, is still plausible and engaging,. We do not yet have mike, a finely crafted computer character, but may someday. We do not have a world government but have so far avoided the world war that RH uses to motivate it. His vision of life on the moon with its fem-centered families still seems novel and imaginative, and could well emerge in the circumstances he sketches out.
It doesn't seem likely that farming will ever be a profitable export activity on the moon, but doubtless will be done if a sustainable settlement is created there--and yes most likely under ground, etc etc.
A great book, one that can be read casually or carefully as the mood strikes the reader.
It's among the most thought-provoking books I've ever read and shows that first rate futurism need not be pedantic in tone or or high brow in presentation.
The penal colony on Luna revolts and the resulting war between Terra and Luna is horrendous. Heinlein illustrates the first use of kinetic strike weapons and the propaganda use of food for a starving Earth. He details how personal integrity and personal freedom must interrelate. Read and enjoy and think
Top reviews from other countries
No matter whether a book is fiction or non-fiction I always need my books to be entertaining. TMIAHM is great that way. Every time I start it I have to make no effort to keep reading, it just keeps grabbing me and taking me forward.
Many years ago when I read it the very first time, it was a hard cover library copy and I was sitting on the window seat in a bus going to the public library in Delhi. The purpose of reading it then was to see if I wanted to keep it or return it and get something from the library. As I read the first few paragraphs of Mannie's weird mixed up dialect I knew it was going to be a return. However by the time the bus reached the library I was waist-deep in intrigue and wild horses could not have pulled the book from my hands.
Not only do you get engrossed in the story itself, but you start caring about the characters as if they are your own family. Only RAH has that magic! Who else can make you care about a computer as a person?
I would not say you must read this book. No, be very careful picking up this book as it would shake your preconceptions, your prejudices, your lifelong beliefs! And it will probably make you cry. If you have any soul at all, it would make you cry with emotion, happiness as well as sadness. And it will haunt you. For ever!
"What is it that's moral for a group to do but not moral for a member of that group to do alone?" This and other questions like this have stayed with me ever since I read it.
So be careful, but if you can handle the rollercoaster of emotions, and if you love sci-fi, if you love good storytelling, you are in for a treat!
But I found the explanations of setting up revolutionary 'cells' unnecessarily over detailed (this is a novel not a 'how to' manual) and the shortened grammar in use by the main character from his first person viewpoint (and the other characters too) hard work and 'jarring'. It reminded me of A Clockwork Orange. It wasn't bad, per se, and - in a post text message world - probably not 'inaccurate' but it did make the book a strain to read.
Not one I'll return to.
It certainly was worth a read, at least as good as the other 2 books and considered by many to be Heinlein's best book.
The characters, particularly mannie, the main character talk in a slightly strange way (sounded like a russian trying to speak english crossed with some future new language with new words added), but dont let this put you off in any way - if anything it adds to the quality of the reading experience.
I wont talk about the plot or the general gist of the book, etc as you can read this in the description and in other reviews - suffice to say that if you like sci-fi then you will like this. It's not space opera, but it is rather brilliant.
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