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The Puppet Masters: In Progress (No Spoilers)
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Adelaide
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Oct 31, 2012 11:38PM

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But it is true, it is mostly from his characters mouths and not his. That said, the feeling seems pretty consistent, and so I can't help feel that his own philosophies stand somewhat behind it.

I also have issues with Heinlein and women, but it's been awhile since I've read him. And I'm not sure how the older stuff compares with the more free-lovin later books. I loved him when I was in High School though. Man, I just devoured everything the library had.

As far as RAH in general--well, I wept when I read the whole collection of his juveniles on the shelf in the Dallas Public Library...and a very kind Librarian took me by the hand and showed me the adult section: Asimov, Anderson, Niven, Laumer, Biggle (Jr.), Pohl, Piper; and a whole raft of big, long books by RAH I had not read. I had had no idea...

And if anything rubs me the wrong way, I'll make sure to note it. :)
Ok, so I am a few pages in and the women characters are sexy objects who know when to remain quiet. Heinlein's portrayals of women are starting to come back to me. They tend to be a certain kind of man's idealized version of what a woman should be: always willing and never a drag. (While somewhat outdated now, the open sexuality of all the characters was pretty forward for the 50s.) I am amused rather than angered, which is how I am going to approach the rest of the book, unless he gets too out of hand.

Another book club I am in recently read Foundation by Isaac Asimov in which only one woman in the Foundation is briefly mentioned: a telephone operator. (The other woman in the book lives outside the Foundation and is annoying.) So is it better to have no women in space or only super sexy women on Earth? I opt for some women (no matter how unflatteringly or unrealistically portrayed) just for the sake of a moderate amount of realism. While Heinlein's women seem silly to me now, when I was in high school, they were fairly eye-opening characters for me. They were sexual beings who were generally not slut-shamed for their activities. While their sexuality is their defining characteristic, at least they were allowed to be competent and do interesting things.