Ratings23
Average rating3.4
Stranger in a Strange Land is a 1961 science fiction novel by American author Robert A. Heinlein. It tells the story of Valentine Michael Smith, a human who comes to Earth in early adulthood after being born on the planet Mars and raised by Martians. The novel explores his interaction with—and eventual transformation of—terrestrial culture. The title is an allusion to the phrase in Exodus 2:22. According to Heinlein, the novel's working title was The Heretic. Several later editions of the book have promoted it as "The most famous Science Fiction Novel ever written".
Reviews with the most likes.
Heinlein is one of those giants of Sci-Fi. If you are familiar with the genre you will have heard his name mentioned, and Stranger in Strange Land is considered to be one of his best works. It is an intriguing concept - a man raised by aliens is returned to Earth without knowing anything of Earths culture. How would someone without any cultural basis in Earth react to how we live our lives?
The concept is a good one and some of the ideas presented are fascinating - how would you react to the opposite gender if you had never met someone from it before? How would you understand concepts of wealth and economy without any basis in them? Unfortunately, I do not think this has aged well - a frequent problem with classic sci-fi. When you are trying to predict the future, what sounds futuristic in the early 60s may not be so 60 years later. The main challenge I have is in some of the social ideas presented. Heinlein writes women incredibly poorly. It feels like from a different time. This really detracts from the story for me. Other things such as the quasi-religious concepts are drawn out into somewhat bizarre but ultimately dull places, with some strange fetishization which is distracting.
This is not a bad book, but it definitely reads poorly in the modern society. The basic concepts and ideas are intriguing, but the social mores are decidedly dated.
Despite the anachronistic treatment of women, this really is a great example of the way genre can be used to simultaneously push a particular framework while telling a moving story. There's a lot of heavy preaching here, but at the end I had that fantastic gulp of sadness when I have to leave the fictional world behind.
Also, I'm REALLY interested in how my beloved [redacted] can be so influenced by this book without getting whiplash over how blasphemous it is to their faith!
This is a book I used to know well in its somewhat-abbreviated original version, but I haven't been reading Heinlein much in the 21st century.
Reading it again, I find that it's better than I remembered. It has defects, but it still makes a good story and does some things well.
The remarkable thing about it is that it was written gradually during the 1950s and completed by 1960. Had it been written in the late 1960s, one could say that it was of its time.
The first 25 chapters (63% of the book) are gripping stuff, with plenty of action and things to think about. The rest of the book wanders off into an unrealistic wish-fulfillment hippie daydream; it remains readable, but it's hard to see the point of it.
Heinlein apparently said that he wasn't preaching a way of life (though he seems to be doing so), just challenging conventional thinking. Well, yes, but if you challenge conventional thinking, shouldn't you propose something to put in its place? The lifestyle described towards the end of the book isn't a serious proposal, because it wouldn't work without the mind-enhancing qualities of the fictional Martian language; and indeed the characters in the book recognize that the language is essential.
The book portrays a human brought up by Martians, and does it well. The fictional religion of the Fosterites is also well imagined.
Demerits include the treatment of women, which is a bit jarring by modern standards, and Heinlein's tendency to lecture and instruct the reader about life (which continues in his later books).
The book contains plenty of able women with good qualities, but there's a vague sense that they remain subsidiary to men. Perhaps this is just the way people still thought in the 1950s, and not to be blamed on Heinlein specifically. I'm 47 years younger than Heinlein and not well acquainted with the mentality of his generation.
The book is set in the future, we don't know when, but probably in the first half of the 21st century (around now!). There has been a Third World War, which seems to have caused no lasting damage. There's an advanced space drive that enables a trip to Mars in 19 days; there are flying taxis that drive themselves. But there are no mobile phones, computers are barely mentioned, and people still use typewriters. Such are the limitations of foresight.
This uncut version of the book, published for the first time in 1991, is 37% longer than the original cut version from 1961, but to be honest I don't notice much difference. It's the same story, stretched out a bit. When I first read the uncut version in 1992, I thought it was a slight improvement. Now I think that the best policy could have been to take the best of both versions; I think that in some places the cut text is snappier. But I haven't bothered to go through comparing the two page-by-page. Really, you can read either version and get much the same experience, although Heinlein himself preferred the uncut version and cut it only reluctantly at the insistence of his publishers.
In modern terms, you could think of the 1961 edition as the cinema version and the 1991 edition as the extended DVD.
Magic off those clothes
god digs free love, thou art god
grok this to fullness.
Featured Prompt
2,097 booksWhen you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...