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Between Planets

Between Planets

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $6.29
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not bad, not "must-read" either
Review: A strong, unified plot - the entire book is about Don Harvey's quest to reach his parents on Mars. A believable politics of the future. A sympathetic but not at all perfect hero and some good minor characters. An atmospheric vision of Venus as it should have been, a world of swamps inhabited by a few human colonies and a race of intelligent (and friendly!) dinosuaroid that communicate by whistling. What more could you ask?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best of Heinlein's juveniles
Review: A strong, unified plot - the entire book is about Don Harvey's quest to reach his parents on Mars. A believable politics of the future. A sympathetic but not at all perfect hero and some good minor characters. An atmospheric vision of Venus as it should have been, a world of swamps inhabited by a few human colonies and a race of intelligent (and friendly!) dinosuaroid that communicate by whistling. What more could you ask?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: As hauntingly prophetic as Orwell and Huxley
Review: Between Planets was one of the first Heinlein books I read, when I was ten or eleven years old. I never counted how many times I've re-read it since, but if it's over fifty or a hundred times, at least half of them as an adult, it wouldn't surprise me. This is Heinlein writing adventure with the best of the classics -- Robert Louis Stevenson, Daniel Defoe, and Stephen Crane included. When Heinlein wrote it in the 1950's, his description of the planet Venus as capable of sustaining both human life and an intelligent race of dragons was not impossible. That we have since learned that there are no other planets in our solar system which are friendly to life as we know it is unimportant -- we'll someday find planets in other solar systems that are, and Heinlein wrote about that possibility in other of his books such as Starman Jones. But what makes Between Planets so memorable is the portrait Heinlein painted of the planet earth as politically repressed: where you can't make a phone call without a government agency like today's National Security Agency listening; where you can't go to an airport (it's a spaceport in Heinlein's future) without being X-rayed and body searched; where politically incorrect books are sold only by "bookleggers" (we're not there yet but keep your eyes open). And most importantly, where other planets can fight for independence from a world government on earth where a federal officer interrogating you can inform you that your request for a lawyer is about a hundred years too late to be meaningful. Read this book for the tight action writing, the coming of age story, the politics, the descriptions of meeting with non-human races who can be friendlier than our own kind at times. And give it to your kids to read. They're the ones who are going to have to live in the future Heinlein warned us about.

Reviewed by J. Neil Schulman

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Required Heinlien reading
Review: Growing up, this was my fav Heinlien novel. His best works from the 60ws weren't kept in the library at my Catholic School, but as a pre-teen, this is one of the books that hooked me into Speculative Fiction for life.
You'll need to suspend any of the real science you've assimilated regarding Mars or Venus (especially!), but you'll be pleasently suprised if you're young (or young at heart).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Delightful read
Review: I am continually amazed at the consistently high quality of Robert A. Heinlein's writing. Whether he was writing a short story for a pulp magazine, a light adventure story for teenagers, or an epic work for adults, there was one consistent fact running through all of Heinlein's works: they are fun to read. Heinlein's work is the literary anti-thesis of "watching grass grow." His dialogue was top-notch (the best since Oscar Wilde), and his stories were fast-paced and exciting. Although many claim that he lost his touch in later years and began writing overlong, self-indulgent novels that pushed his hobby horses at the expense of a narrative, his "juvies" - great SF adventure yarns written for teens in the 1950's - remain a fascinating and remarkable staple of this kind of literature. Although his writings then were all fast-paced and extremely fun to read, the truly incredible thing about them is that they are much more than just surface-deep: he consistently packed his books with provocative messages. Although some claim that he often beat you over the head and forced his opinions on you, one must at least admit this of Heinlein: his works were intelligent and thought-provoking; and, whether or not you agree with his opinions, you must certainly respect them. His works teach you to think for yourself - certainly a valuable asset for the growing teen. Between Planets, while not being among the top tier of Heinlein juvies (Red Planet, Tunnel In The Sky, Citizen of The Galaxy), is a fine, fun, and delightful read. Like many Heinlein works, it pushes the virtues of the military, and it features a lot of political and social overtones that may be lost among some of the younger readers for which it was intended - which is precisely why I reccommend this (and Heinlein's other juvenile books) to adults as much as to anyone. Readers of all ages can enjoy any of his works as they are invariably well-written and interesting. This book is certainly no exception. It has the quality of a mystery to it (a tactic which Heinlein did not often resort to), and it is suspenseful and will keep you reading. Many have pointed out that the majority of the story is now dated (not to mention impossible) due to subsequent advances in science - true. But Heinlein, though often classed as a "hard" science fiction writer, never intended for science to be the central tenet of his stories; no, Heinlein is the man who introduced the social sciences (politics, economics, psychology) into science fiction. This book is a prime example of that. Those who go around pointing out its scientific fallacies are missing the point. If for nothing else, enjoy the book for what it ultimately is: an enjoyable and delightful science fiction adventure romp. Any Heinlein fan will want to pick this up; if you are unacquainted, however, you should read some of his other works (such as the ones I mentioned, or later novels such as Starship Troopers, Stranger In A Strange Land or The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress) first.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Aw, Shucks!
Review: I give this book only 2 stars because, well, compared to great literature, 'Between Planets' is what it is; a 1950's pulp sci-fi novella.

But that's not to say it isn't a solid, well-written story; it is. It's a bit dated, a bit simplistic, and a bit of fun.

Save this for a cross-country flight, or some other occasion you need to kill time. You're not missing anything if you don't read it.

It's a decent, solid novella that would earn any college student an 'A+' in a fiction-composition class.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not bad, not "must-read" either
Review: I love Heinlein's fiction. He is the great author. But this book is not the one of his best ones. There is action, there is story, it's nice to read, and it's not bad if you have to fill transantlantic flight. At least you will not feal bad after it (a lot of books does not have this important feature :-( ) But if you will not read it, you will not lose much. That's it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Open sky!
Review: Just for the record, before I launch into this, I have absolutely no problem with Heinlein's depiction of whether there was life on Venus (or Mars) or whether people could safety live on either. I don't know if Heinlein actually believed that back then (as a lot of folks did, we're talking the days before satellites, kids) or he just figured the cardinal rule of fun writing: don't let science get in the way of a good story. And he sure doesn't, Heinlein draws us into a pure SF adventure story that rockets around the solar system, as seen through the eyes of one Don Harvey, who really only wants to get back to Mars to see his parents. In the process he gets accosted by an irate Earth government (and Heinlein's depiction of an almost authoritarian Earth was probably a social comment that went way above the heads of his target audience . . . but then this is the guy who thought Starship Troopers was a childrens book), winds up on Venus and gets involved in the revolution (Viva!). It's mostly nonstop action and the settings are fun, if you can suspend your disbelief and take yourself back to a time where it was possible that there was life on Venus and we might one day wind up there, and I don't see why you can't, you'll find yourself enjoying this despite everything. Harvey is hilariously stubborn when it comes to just about everything, the aliens are interesting in a nonscience way, plot twists abound, and a grand time is had by all. Sure, Heinlein sticks in some of his usual "the army makes a man out of you and it's the only good life" stuff that eventually became the central concept of Starship Troopers (not that I didn't enjoy that book, mind you), by and by, this is optimistic endearing science fiction with some pointed messages but nothing too deep or heavy. It's just an enjoyably fun way to spend two hundred pages.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Open sky!
Review: Just for the record, before I launch into this, I have absolutely no problem with Heinlein's depiction of whether there was life on Venus (or Mars) or whether people could safety live on either. I don't know if Heinlein actually believed that back then (as a lot of folks did, we're talking the days before satellites, kids) or he just figured the cardinal rule of fun writing: don't let science get in the way of a good story. And he sure doesn't, Heinlein draws us into a pure SF adventure story that rockets around the solar system, as seen through the eyes of one Don Harvey, who really only wants to get back to Mars to see his parents. In the process he gets accosted by an irate Earth government (and Heinlein's depiction of an almost authoritarian Earth was probably a social comment that went way above the heads of his target audience . . . but then this is the guy who thought Starship Troopers was a childrens book), winds up on Venus and gets involved in the revolution (Viva!). It's mostly nonstop action and the settings are fun, if you can suspend your disbelief and take yourself back to a time where it was possible that there was life on Venus and we might one day wind up there, and I don't see why you can't, you'll find yourself enjoying this despite everything. Harvey is hilariously stubborn when it comes to just about everything, the aliens are interesting in a nonscience way, plot twists abound, and a grand time is had by all. Sure, Heinlein sticks in some of his usual "the army makes a man out of you and it's the only good life" stuff that eventually became the central concept of Starship Troopers (not that I didn't enjoy that book, mind you), by and by, this is optimistic endearing science fiction with some pointed messages but nothing too deep or heavy. It's just an enjoyably fun way to spend two hundred pages.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Heinlein: The Early Years
Review: Revolution, aliens, young love; hot stuff to a teener. Uncle Bob at his political, inventive best (this tale includes the first literary description of "stealth" vehicles,,,decades prior to their actual construction in "our" world).


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