I have Middlegame, but haven't gotten to it yet. I cannot deal with audiobooks but I am looking forward to the print version.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I just started reading Stranger In A Strange Land for the first time (I know), and I'm sure I'm supposed to have strong feelings about it, but what are they again? (No spoilers!)
Jesse, I haven't read Stranger or any other Heinlein in a very long time. But my memory is that Stranger has the typical Heinlein strengths and weaknesses -- strong and well-developed ideas, interesting and eccentric male characters, female characters with little more dimension than Playboy bunnies.
Well, you get to add "grok" to your vocabulary, if it wasn't already there. I think you are past the target age to be really wowed by the philosophy. Parts of it are, of course, enraging, but not as much as some of his stuff. Or that's how I remember it from reading it 30+ years ago
I think you are past the target age to be really wowed by the philosophy.
That sounds right!
OK, great -- I couldn't remember if it was now supposed to be awesome or terrible or what.
I read it when it was new and I think I probably was in the target range. I remember enjoying it then; in retrospect, yes, it had the typical Heinlein strengths and weaknesses. Not as bad as some of his things, though.
How much did I hate that T.Stark's new Jarvis was named Friday? I may have missed an element of sarcasm, but since I hated Heinlein's Friday, I hated Stark's as a matter of course.
I figured Tony's Friday was named after His Girl Friday.
Or Robinson Crusoe's Friday ... as they say, he's the only person who ever had everything done by Friday.
I dismissed Crusoe's Friday because girl voice--which made me associate Heinlein's Friday. I never thought of His Girl--which I shall do henceforward, thanks!