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Cargando... Three by Heinlein: The Puppet Masters, Waldo, and Magic, Inc.por Robert A. Heinlein
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Pertenece a las series editorialesContieneMagic, Inc. por Robert A. Heinlein (indirecto)
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Having just finished H.G. Wells’ [War of the Worlds], [The Puppet Masters] seemed somewhat derivative in the early details of the alien landing and the alien’s strategy for taking over the world. But Heinlein’s aliens are an interesting wrinkle because they require human hosts to survive and perform tasks, and they are capable of a near omniscient collective memory and universal awareness throughout their population. The construction of the aliens seems designed by Heinlein as a Jonathon Swift-like satiric comment on the Red-Scare politics of the day, posing the citizenry as slaves to a devious, superior collective authority and incapable of individual thought or action.
The most enjoyable aspect of Heinlein’s novel is the marriage of hard-boiled detective fiction with science fiction, a sort of Dasheill Hammet meets, well, Heinlein. The hero of the story possesses the sharp-edged and icy mind and tongue of Sam Spade. As with
Spade and his hard-boiled brothers, this façade covers a buried wealth of emotion and a valiant spirit, none of which can be acknowledged by the character for fear of appearing weak or exposed. The ‘dames’ are curvy and sassy, but smarter and tougher than a glib, surface reading of the text allows.
Another bonus is Heinlein’s view of what the world would look like 50 years gone from his writing the novel. We haven’t come as far as Heinlein foresaw, but the imagined world is a wildly interesting one. Particularly interesting is Heinlein’s view of marriage in the future as a largely contractual and monetary agreement, heavily regulated by the government.
The only down side to the story is the slightly anti-climatic climax. Too many of these wonderfully imagined stories seem to end with a whimper rather than a bang. I’m not looking for Tolkein-sized battles, but the ending here, another derivation on H.G. Wells’ [War of the Worlds], fizzled a bit.
Bottom Line: A great science fiction classic written in the tradition of hard-boiled detective fiction. Read it if you’re a fan of either genre.
4 bones!!!! ( )