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Robert A. Heinlein: A real-life Forrest Gump
Tor Blogs ^ | August 11, 2010 | MITCH WAGNER

Posted on 11/16/2013 9:33:41 PM PST by narses

William Patterson’s big Heinlein biography isn’t just the life story of one man. It’s a history of United States in the first half of the 20th century. Not a complete history, but in some ways it’s better than complete, because it’s more intimate. Heinlein was like a real-life Forrest Gump, in the middle of many of the trends that shaped America.

Heinlein was born in Kansas, in 1907, the heart of Middle America.

He was a cadet at Annapolis during the years between the great wars. His classmates believed ruefully that they’d be the first academy class that would never see combat. Of course, World War II belied those beliefs. Heinlein’s military experience put him in the middle of the American rise to world power.

Tuberculosis put an end to his naval career, which plunged Heinlein into the middle of the Great Depression. Until Heinlein’s Navy discharge, he was a civil servant who didn’t have to worry about where his next paycheck was coming from. But after the war, he and then-wife Leslyn were on their own with only his small medical pension. Heinlein had to learn to support himself. This wasn’t the first time he was on his own financially—his family growing up was huge, his parents were distant, and they were always broke. Heinlein took a variety of jobs during his adolescence, including work as a math tutor, artist’s model, insurance salesman, and professional soft-shoe or tap dancer in a roadhouse.

Heinlein worked on the 1934 California gubernatorial campaign of socialist Upton Sinclair, whose End Poverty In California (EPIC) party sought drastic remedies to the Great Depression. Later, Heinlein ran for state office himself. This put him in the middle of big-state and even national politics.

Heinlein didn’t serve during World War II because of his health, but he worked at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, recruiting Isaac Asimov, L. Sprague de Camp, and others to build military technology. His co-workers included a young Naval officer named Virginia Gerstenfield, whom he would later marry, spending the last 40 years of his life as her husband. In Philadelphia, Heinlein was in the middle of the war at home.

And of course as the top science fiction writer of his lifetime, Heinlein was in the middle of the growth of that genre, from crazy Buck Rogers stuff for kids and nerds to mainstream pop culture, dominating the Hollywood box office and book bestseller lists.

Patterson’s biography, Robert A. Heinlein: In Dialogue with His Century: Volume 1 (1907-1948): Learning Curve covers that period of his life. It looks pretty intimidating at first—it’s a massive brick of a book and it doesn’t even cover Heinlein’s whole life, just the first half of it—but it’s a fascinating read, not just for Heinlein fans, or science fiction fans, but for anyone curious about life in this great country during a turbulent half-century.

Heinlein didn’t just get himself in the middle of history. He also had a knack for getting into the middle of unlikely situations. If you think you’ve got him pegged as a political conservative and ex-military man, think again.

On the one hand, Heinlein was a hard-headed scientific rationalist. One of my favorite Heinlein quotes:

What are the facts? Again and again and again—what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore divine revelation, forget what “the stars foretell,” avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable “verdict of history”—what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your only clue. Get the facts!

But he was also sympathetic to occult beliefs. His second wife, Leslyn, his partner during his political and early science fiction careers, was a practicing witch, and he believed in life after death. He made a pact with several friends that whichever of them died first would get in touch with the others from beyond.

Heinlein not only espoused free love, but he also practiced it from very early on. Both of his first marriages were open marriages, decades before the free love generation of the 60s.

One of my favorite—and weirdest—passages in Patterson’s biography comes after Heinlein has graduated Annapolis, but before he accepts his military commission on the U.S.S. Lexington. The Lexington was only the second aircraft carrier commissioned and was the biggest ship afloat, with a crew of 3,000 and the most advanced technology available in 1929, including primitive ballistic computers.

There are many things you might imagine a young Navy officer doing in the time between graduation and his first commission. One thing you wouldn’t imagine is what Heinlein actually did: He took an apartment in New York’s Greenwich Village for 11 weeks, immersing himself in the bohemian culture there, sculpting and painting nude women models, playing at sex, becoming an enthusiastic Socialist, and experimenting with mental telepathy.

Then he returned to the Navy. Heinlein apparently saw no contradiction between those lives.

Heinlein was a fascinating individual, and he’s been one of my heroes all my life. I’m glad I had a chance to get to know him better through Patterson’s biography.

Robert A. Heinlein portrait by Donato Giancola

Mitch Wagner is a fan, freelance technology journalist and social media strategist, who blogs about technology on the Computerworld Tool Talk Blog. Follow him on Twitter: @MitchWagner. He’s looking for a publisher for his first science fiction novel, and hard at work on his second.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: heinlein; scifi
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1 posted on 11/16/2013 9:33:41 PM PST by narses
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To: narses; TNMountainMan; alphadog; infool7; Heart-Rest; HoosierDammit; red irish; fastrock; ...
+

Freep-mail me to get on or off my pro-life and Catholic List:

Add me / Remove me

Please ping me to note-worthy Pro-Life or Catholic threads, or other threads of general interest.

2 posted on 11/16/2013 9:34:09 PM PST by narses (... unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you do not have life within you.)
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To: narses; Allegra; big'ol_freeper; Lil'freeper; shove_it; TrueKnightGalahad; Cincinatus' Wife; ...
Gadzooks! Did not know this book existed... but I just went to Amazon and ordered one!
3 posted on 11/16/2013 10:00:29 PM PST by Bender2 ("I've got a twisted sense of humor, and everything amuses me." RAH Beyond this Horizon)
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To: narses

Just ordered the paperback at Amazon for $8.00. Hard to go wrong at that price unless it’s utterly horrible.


4 posted on 11/16/2013 10:04:40 PM PST by GATOR NAVY
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To: narses

I can grok it


5 posted on 11/16/2013 10:20:16 PM PST by bigbob (The best way to get a bad law repealed is to enforce it strictly. Abraham Lincoln)
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To: narses

“But he was also sympathetic to occult beliefs. His second wife, Leslyn, his partner during his political and early science fiction careers, was a practicing witch, and he believed in life after death. He made a pact with several friends that whichever of them died first would get in touch with the others from beyond.”

So did Heinlein think ‘life after death’ was an ‘occult belief’, or does the author think it is?


6 posted on 11/16/2013 10:36:03 PM PST by chaosagent (Remember, no matter how you slice it, forbidden fruit still tastes the sweetest!)
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To: chaosagent

RAH did.


7 posted on 11/16/2013 10:38:44 PM PST by narses (... unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you do not have life within you.)
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To: narses

I don’t get the comparison with Forrest Gump, unless it’s the early association with liberal women with drug problems.


8 posted on 11/16/2013 10:46:28 PM PST by batterycommander (a little more rubble, a lot less trouble)
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To: narses

I refute Mr. Patterson’s biographical exercise of one of the most gifted writers of Science Fiction known!

I have in my possession a copy of Robert A. Heinlein’s, “Expanded Universe”, published in 1980. It includes the man’s very own words about the heirs of Patrick Henry, pragmatic patriotism, the first literary piece that would be found in today’s “prepper publications”, and his trip to the Soviet Union - as measured from an American citizen’s viewpoint, for contrast.

There is a large leap, from being a fan, to concocting a biography, on a deceased literary figure.

In the case with writing about Mr. Heinlein, if one should be of the generation born as of, or after The Fall of The Berlin Wall, there is a complete shift in the psyche, that, I believe, cannot be bridged. There is also the internal appreciation, that only present and former military members can fathom, when they read his particular writings, that those who have not served, nor desire to appreciate the U.S. military ‘community’, cannot.


9 posted on 11/16/2013 11:38:01 PM PST by Terry L Smith
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To: Terry L Smith

Concur completely.


10 posted on 11/17/2013 12:25:02 AM PST by Zippo44 (Liberal: another word for poltroon.)
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To: narses

Just how in the hell does Heinlein’s life even remotely compare to a mentally retarded Gump? What an insult to this great writer.


11 posted on 11/17/2013 12:31:26 AM PST by calex59
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To: Bender2; Impy; Perdogg; GOPsterinMA

Nuttin’ wrong with sculpting or painting nekkid women... so long as they look more like Olivia Wilde and less like that disgusting slob Lena Dunham.


12 posted on 11/17/2013 12:34:35 AM PST by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: Terry L Smith
Are you saying he was staunchly anticommunist?
13 posted on 11/17/2013 3:23:39 AM PST by GOPJ (Obama - "too arrogant to question his own bad judgement" ... Greenfield)
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To: Bender2

Thanks for the ping, Bendy! As you know RAH is my favorite author. I met him once...he made me blush by talking about my red hair.

Meanwhile, I’m putting this one on my Christmas list.

<3
VK


14 posted on 11/17/2013 3:37:59 AM PST by VermiciousKnid (Sic narro nos totus!)
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To: VermiciousKnid

I first started reading his works in 1969. I continued for the next 25 years or more finding anything he’d written and devouring it.

Unfortunately, in his last years I believe his beliefs (and oddities) took hold of him and he was at best, tolerable even though somewhat erratic in my estimation.

His ideas about sex were avante garde in the early years but there were some very serious implications in one or two of his character lines that smacked of incest.

While SIASL is considered his most widely known work, But, I preferred ‘Moon is a Harsh Mistress’, ‘Time Enough for Love’ and ‘I will Fear No Evil’. His last books (about 4-5 of them) I did not like much at all.


15 posted on 11/17/2013 3:56:26 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: Gaffer

16 posted on 11/17/2013 4:00:47 AM PST by JoeProBono (SOME IMAGES MAY BE DISTURBING VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED;-{)
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To: narses

"Robert Heinlein" 20.5" x 24" oil on paper on panel © 2009 Donato Giancola


17 posted on 11/17/2013 4:07:26 AM PST by JoeProBono (SOME IMAGES MAY BE DISTURBING VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED;-{)
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To: narses

In consideration of the coming schism, I am rereading “Friday” to relearn the North American divisions Heinlein predicted.

I tried to read “The Cat That Walks Through Walls” but quit 2/3 of the way through. His latter books got bogged down in dialogue that accomplished little but increasing the page count.

I may be provoked to dig up and read the Lazarus Long books. I’m dreading it because the want to is barely balanced by the too lazy. After all, I have been there and done that, more than once before


18 posted on 11/17/2013 4:22:36 AM PST by bert ((K.E. N.P. N.C. +12 ..... Travon... Felony assault and battery hate crime)
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To: narses

very poorly written. Hard to follow.


19 posted on 11/17/2013 4:25:55 AM PST by Mercat
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To: narses

One of my all time favorite Sci-Fi writers.


20 posted on 11/17/2013 4:31:50 AM PST by Farnsworth (Now playing in America: "Stupid is the new normal")
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