The Future History of Robert Heinlein's works was commissioned by John
Campbell after he noticed that many of Heinlein's stories seemed to fit a
pattern. The specific events are dated - his famous story _The Roads Mus
t Roll_ which depicts a US covered in mechanised highways was set in 1975 -
but none the less it helped create a consistent vision which he used to
great effect. The concept was adopted by later writers, and is now a
standard tool of SF writers.
The History has many gaps, stories that Heinlein may have intended to
write, but never completed. One such gap has now been filled. _The Sound
Of His Wings_ documents the death and rise of Nehemiah Scudder, the
prophetic tyrant who appears in several stories.
The title is peculiarly appropriate, as so many of his were. It is taken
from one of the war poets, and refers to the sound of a falling plane,
comparing it to the sound of Lucifer being thrown from heaven. No better
title for the story could have been conceived.
Heinlein feared that the US - and the world - was heading toward a time
of insanity. Some might argue that he was right. In this novella the
world is entering a period of mad balkanisation. Some international order
is kept by the Unified Space Command, which alone controls the satellites
containing nuclear missiles.
Nehemiah Scudder is just a demagogue, but one wielding more power by the
day. His message is strangely plausible, and seems to many to be the one
force capable of uniting the weakened and divided United States. He not
only gathers the support of the masses, but seems to be able to convert
the leaders which oppose him. Convert them easily, in fact.
Dayle Spencer is an lieutenant aboard one of the nuclear satellites. He
thinks little of it when the Scudderite movement starts to gain ground
there, but then notices that officers unfiendly to Scudder are rotated
back to Earth - and when they return they are suspiciously enthusiastic
about the New Crusade.
Scudder's plan must be left to purchasers of the book, but it's a thriller
that still grips today. As the tale reaches its climax the readers are
reminded that not only Satan had wings ...
This is a remarkable read. Most of us thought that there would be no new
stories from Heinlein's back list. I have no idea why this novelette has
finally been released, but I'm sure that it will be incredibly popular.
It's oddly hard to acquire. I suggest that readers of this newsgroup
lobby their book suppliers to bring it in. It's published by Underbridge
Press, at a RRP of $4.95 US.
jds
>This is a remarkable read. Most of us thought that there would be no new
>stories from Heinlein's back list. I have no idea why this novelette has
>finally been released, but I'm sure that it will be incredibly popular.
>It's oddly hard to acquire. I suggest that readers of this newsgroup
>lobby their book suppliers to bring it in. It's published by Underbridge
>Press, at a RRP of $4.95 US.
Underbridge Press is , of course, distributed in North America by Troll.
-----
Patrick Nielsen Hayden : p...@tor.com
senior editor, Tor Books : opinions mine
> >This is a remarkable read. Most of us thought that there would be no new
> >stories from Heinlein's back list. I have no idea why this novelette has
> >finally been released, but I'm sure that it will be incredibly popular.
> >[snip] It's published by Underbridge Press, at a RRP of $4.95 US.
> Underbridge Press is , of course, distributed in North America by Troll.
...which happens to be owned by Aprils Fools, Intl., right?
--
Ahasuerus http://www.clark.net/pub/ahasuer/, including:
FAQs: rec.arts.sf.written, alt.fan.heinlein, alt.pulp + books on writing SF
ftp://ftp.clark.net/pub/ahasuer/heinlein.faq
: >This is a remarkable read. Most of us thought that there would be no new
: >stories from Heinlein's back list. I have no idea why this novelette has
: >finally been released, but I'm sure that it will be incredibly popular.
: >It's oddly hard to acquire. I suggest that readers of this newsgroup
: >lobby their book suppliers to bring it in. It's published by Underbridge
: >Press, at a RRP of $4.95 US.
: Underbridge Press is , of course, distributed in North America by Troll.
And I believe that they can be reached via e-mail at loof-lirpa.com.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Bob Goudreau Data General Corporation
goud...@dg-rtp.dg.com 62 Alexander Drive
+1 919 248 6231 Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, USA
OK, it's a yuck...but I'd like to see such a story, crafted
by one (or several) of the Heinlein influenced writers of today
(L. Neil Smith, Varley, Gerrold, Spider Robinson, and no doubt
several others...). That, and I'd like to see someone from
the Heinlein school of writing do a story on what happened
at the Howard family conference of 2012...it was alluded to
severl times in stories involving Lazarus Long...would make
a great story, done properly...
Lee K. Gleason N5ZMR
Control-G Consultants
gle...@mwk.com
And while we're at it, the "Future History" chart talks about three
revolutions that took place at about the same time. We know about the
American one, and "Logic of Empire" suggests who overthrew what on Venus,
but what in hell happened in Antarctica?
Mike