Posted on 12/01/2016 7:38:11 AM PST by CharlesOConnell
Manuel Garcia O'Kelly-Davis, or Mannie for short, goes on a routine computer repair job only to learn that the super computer has gained self-awareness. It's just another day in a science fiction world, really. Mannie befriends the personalitynaming it Mikeand helps it gain an understanding of human behavior. To this end, Mike requests Mannie bring a recorder to a "Sons of Revolution" rally.
When the Warden's bodyguard busts in to arrest everybody, Mannie helps revolutionary Wyoming Knott escape, and like all classic heroes, he gets dragged into a fight that isn't his. The duo hides in a hotel room and eventually contacts another revolutionary, Professor Bernardo de la Paz. Mike reveals to these three that under the Authority's rule, Luna will exhaust its resources, leading to food riots and eventually cannibalism.
Deciding he draws the line at cannibalism, Mannie joins the revolution. The group begins planning for the day they will overthrow the Authority: creating covert revolution cells, laundering money, and setting up an imaginary figurehead through Mike called Adam Selene. After a group of Peace Dragoons rape and murder a Luna woman, the Loonies riot, killing the Warden and the Security Chief and claiming Luna as their own.
Mike sends false information to Earth to buy the revolution time. Meanwhile, Prof creates the first Luna Congress as a governmental front for his own political scheming. Mannie and Prof decide to head earthside as diplomats to convince the Federated Nations to accept Luna as a free state. The night before he goes, Wyoh opts into his family as the sixth Davis wife.
On Earth, Mannie and Prof embark on a public tour to garner support for Luna. They also enter committee meetings with the Authority to state their side of the story, which goes about as well as you'd expect. Eventually, Mannie is arrested for polygamy, and he and Prof must escape back to Luna.
En route, Prof tells Mannie that failure was always the goal. Mannie's arrest and the Chairman's attempt to bribe him rally the Loonies under a banner of patriotic spiritthe revolution is now on like Donkey Kong.
The Federated Nations send troops to reclaim Luna, but the fierce Loonies fight them back. Mannie begins Operation Hard Rock, and Mike begins launching moon rocks at the earth's surface to warn the nations there that the moon canand willfight back.
The Federated Nations attack with war cruisers, destroying the catapult, but Mannie and Mike have a secret weapon: another catapult. A game of galactic cat and mouse begins. Mannie continues launching rocks while trying to keep the catapult's location hidden from the F.N. cruisers, and just before he runs out of ammunition, the nations of Earth begin recognizing Luna as a legitimate state. The Loonies win.
But victory comes at a cost: Prof dies immediately after claiming victory for the state, and Mike's self-aware personality is deleted after his hardware takes damage. Withdrawing from politics all together, Mannie contemplates what life would be like on the frontier of humanitythe asteroid belt.
Ditto. I always wondered what happened to Mike and Manny, which topic Heinlein returns to in “The Cat Who Walked Through Walls”, but that book is so far fallen from the quality of Heinlein’s earlier works that I ended up skipping to the end — and still not finding out. I never bothered to read Heinlein’s final book, “To Sail beyond the Sunset”.
Don’t think I have read that one. I read Star Beast - now that was strange.
"The Number of the Beast" started out great, and then Robert Heinlein lost his freaking mind before he finished the book.
He seriously looses his grasp of reality. I think he was suffering from his physical ailments at this point and simply couldn't keep his thinking rational. He may have had a stroke or something between the start and finish of that book.
Weird is right. It starts off as very good science fiction, and then turns into kooky crazy raving wackerdoodle!
Piers Anthony seemingly also drank whatever kool-aid Heinlein was imbibing at the time.
Did you ever read this book?.....................
Nope. I read a lot of Heinlein's early stuff, like "Rocket Ship Galileo" and "The moon is a harsh mistress", "Glory Road" and such. I think I missed a lot of stuff Heinlein wrote in the later 1970s.
There is a very serious and obvious "disconnect" in the book. It goes for quite a ways as very good and rational science fiction, and then suddenly swerves over into the Land of Oz and Dante's Inferno.
I am not at all surprised that Heinlein may have had a stroke while in the middle of writing this book. It certainly reads as though something serious had suddenly happened to the author. I think the book was only published on the strength of Heinlein's past work, and it should have been put in file 13 by the editor.
I attended the World Science Fiction convention the year it came out, and brought my copy of ST with me on the off chance that I'd encounter Heinlein and get it autographed.
By coincidence, the year it came out was also the year I sold my first story to John Campbell, then editor of ANALOG Science Fiction. I did encounter Campbell at the convention, and introduced myself as just having sold him a story. He invited me to join him at his table at the Hugo Awards banquet that evening.
To my surprise, Campbell had also invited Heinlein to sit with us. Of course, ST won the Hugo. I immediately dashed up to my hotel room, grabbed my copy, and got Heinlein's autograph on it. That started a friendship with Heinlein that lasted until his death.
I also had a good writer-editor relationship with Campbell that lasted until his death. Unfortunately, I'm still writing Campbell-type stories, but he's no longer buying. I've been unsuccessful in selling stories to his successor editors at ANALOG.
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