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Posts Tagged ‘Heinlein’

Heinlein, and Small Prophets

I don’t usually think about science fiction as a genre with predictive power.  Sometimes technologies from science fiction appear on the battlefield or in my kitchen, but I rarely read old SF and think, “oh, yes, that’s exactly how that technological trend turned out.”  This might have something to do with the fact that I read more New Wave SF, which tends to be interested in the human story rather than techie prognostication, but I’ve read a decent quantity of harder SF and cyberpunk too.

On Saturday, during a con lull, I read the first few pages of Heinlein’s novel Space Cadet.  Our Hero arrives at Space Academy arrives, and gets a call from his father.  He pulls his phone out of his pocket; they have a quick chat of the “Hi Dad, yes I got there okay, everything’s great, I can’t talk now I’m in a crowd but I’ll call you back” variety.  Another new student looks over to Our Hero, smirks, and says “That’s why I pack my phone in my suitcase–so I can’t hear it ring.”

The exchange lasts for maybe three quarters of a small page.  The phone’s not called anything but a phone; the conversation is spare and what I’d call ‘well observed’ if there had been any way for Heinlein to observe conversations like this one.  There wasn’t, of course–Space Cadet was published in 1948.

Reading an accurate prophecy is a new kind of thrill for me.  I wonder what would happen if I tried to write one…

I’d probably fall on my face, of course, but it would be an interesting fall.

Readercon Aftermath

Still reeling.  A friend visited from out of town, which as Confucius reminds us, is a pleasure–“you peng zi yuanfang lai, bu yi le hu?”  (Characters to follow once I figure out why Chinese support is broken on WordPress…)  But, unfortunately, my friend’s visit coincided with Readercon, so rather than abandoning either him or the con, I had to squeeze a weekend’s worth of conning into a single crazy day.  And what a day!  Excellent times with my editors at Tor, and an evening of great drinks with John Crowley, Jim Morrow, and a host of other wonderful folks whose company always makes me feel like the dim bulb on the string.

And, of course, my annual visit to the dealer’s room.  This must be what BotCon feels like for toy people.  (That’s to say, people who care about toys, not people who are toys.  BotCon for people who are toys must feel pretty… strange.)

Much more varied than my usual haul of Zelazny paperbacks.  Of course, I now own most of Z.-‘s back catalog, so it’s time to branch out.  I’m woefully under-read when it comes to Heinlein–I went through my Starship Troopers phase like so many young geeks (though it was the Shakespeare bit in “Have Spacesuit, Will Travel” that gave me the chills), but this’ll be my first time through either Moon or Space Cadet.

Very excited about the more modern books in the pile, too.  I’ve heard cool things about all of them, and it’ll be great to see for myself.