Postby ClosetOtaku » Sun Jan 16, 2005 1:32 am
I believe one of the best novels I've read (being in the Army) is Heinlein's Starship Troopers. Pretty darn clean, violence only in the context of warfare, a dry sense of humor, and some deep philosophical discussion. It is, in my mind, the archetype of Science Fiction -- putting man in a future setting and seeing how the future has (and hasn't) changed him. No "miracle weapons", no Deus Ex Machina, simply the struggle of man versus the unseen, unfeeling alien, and more to the point, man versus himself.
Now, that said... I also read Friday when it was first published (I was in college at the time). By then, Heinlein's powers had degenerated to the point where he was little more than a Dirty Old Man writing what was essentially a male fantasy with some scifi thrown in. It was bad enough that I gave up reading him.... which in retrospect was probably a mistake, as some of his other novels are considered classics of the genre. I was still very disappointed and disillusioned.
EDIT: By the way, if you have seen that putrid piece of garbage known as the Starship Troopers movie, any similarity between the movie and the book is purely coincidental. Sorry to be so passionate about it, but I'd hate to think someone would associate the movie with the book. The two have almost nothing in common worth mentioning.
"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." -- C.S. Lewis