Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section, we recommend "something old" that is still well worth
reading. "Something Old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique
classic to a good book first published four or more years ago.
“STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND”
by Robert Heinlein (first published in 1961; longer version first published
1991)
Some books you read for pleasure. Some you read because
you think you should. And some you read because you have to (reviews etc.).
But
there is a very small category of books that you read because somebody has
earnestly and repeatedly recommended them to you. For me, one such book was
Robert Heinlein’s Stranger in a Strange
Land.
If I am searching for escapist or genre reading, science
fiction is far from being my first choice (and pure fantasy is of little real
interest to me). I have, however, read the odd entertaining SF novel and have
even read some that give real food for thought. Robert Heinlein (1907-1988) I
knew, largely by reputation only, as a prolific American SF hack who emerged
out of pulp fiction in the 1940s and hit his stride as a big name in the 1950s
and 1960s. I remember as a kid reading one of the books Heinlein wrote for
juveniles – Have Spacesuit, Will Travel.
Apart from that, the only one of his books I’d read was The Puppet Masters, a vigorous piece of pulp in which aliens invade
the Earth, attach themselves to human brains and proceed to drive human beings
as their slaves, until there is a real human fight-back and a rousing finale of
the sort that pulps require.
It
was enjoyable brainless entertainment.
Then a friend started telling me that I really should
read what was touted as Heinlein’s magnum
opus and SF masterpiece Stranger in a
Strange Land - a book that was said to come to grips with really important
matters and raise all manner of profound philosophical questions about the
human condition.
So
I gave it a go.
In the preface to the 1991 edition of the novel that I
read, Robert Heinlein’s widow said that this was the uncut version. Stranger in a Strange Land was 160,000
words when it was originally published in 1961. The 1991 edition restored the
full 220,000 word version that Heinlein apparently laboured over for much of
the 1950s and then presented to the publishers. In 1961 the publishers told him
to cut it by about a third – which he did.
By
the time I got to the end of the 1991 edition, I decided that the original
publishers had been right. At 654 pages in the edition I read, Stranger in a Strange Land is formless,
rambling, repetitive and incredibly dull. A flatulent bore, complete with
jejune ideas. At most its central situation and ideas might have made a couple
of good short stories in a pulp magazine.
A
synopsis to orient us.
A
Third World War has happened, and commercialised religious organizations have
huge influence in the USA. Michael Valentine Smith is a human male who has
lived his whole life on Mars and has been brought up by Martians (who are never
fully described but who have quite brutal ideas on who or what should live or
die). Michael Valentine Smith is brought to Earth for the first time and kept
under wraps, for observation, first in a hospital, then in a government
facility. He knows nothing of the human condition. He knows nothing of human
sexuality and has never seen a woman before.
Smith
is sprung from his confinement by Jubal Harshaw, an offbeat physicist and
author who is often Heinlein’s mouthpiece. Jubal proceeds to orient him to the
realities of the world. Having lived all his life naked, Smith does not know what
clothes are, what war is or how jealousy feels. He has psychic abilities and superhuman
intelligence. Why he has these attrbutes is never clearly explained, except
that we have to take it as a “given”. He is also unbelievably wealthy as he nominally
“owns” Mars and the mining rights thereto. There is much page-filling detail on
financial tussles over this.
These
earlier sections of the novel are like a ham-fisted combination of Frankenstein and Candide. I mean the parts of Mary Shelley’s original novel Frankenstein, where the monster gets a convenient
crash course on human history and mores, just as Michael Valentine Smith does.
And I mean the way Voltaire’s satire has an incredibly innocent young man
exposed to humanity’s follies and shortcomings.
Gradually
Michael Valentine Smith the Martian gets to display his mental and physical
powers. At first he dabbles in a religion, the “Fosterite Church of the New
Revelation”, that sounds a little like Scientology (segregation of inner and
outer members; highly sexed inner members). Perhaps this should not surprise
us. Heinlein was a sometime friend of fellow-SF writer L. Ron Hubbard, founder
of Scientology, and apparently the two of them once had a bet on who could
found the more outrageous religion.
This
first dabbling in pop religion, and his increased knowledge of human sexual
interaction, lead Michael Valentine Smith to found a “religion” of his own, the
“Church of All Worlds” in which all religious traditions from all planets are
equally valid (and therefore equally invalid?). But celebrations are based on
sexual intercourse, the complete merging of personalities and there being no God
but the collective self. As Michael Valentine Smith has broken with his former
Fosterite colleagues, the novel leads to his public martyrdom when the
Fosterites call him a heretic from their original beliefs and his church is
attacked. (Apparently Heinlein’s working title for the novel was The Heretic.) After this there is a
memorial feasting on his body, in which his friend, and now acolyte. Jubal
Harshaw takes part. This, according to the novel, is based on a Martian rite,
though at least part of Heinlein’s intent is clearly to parallel and ridicule
the Christian idea of the Eucharist. But, for all the mayhem, Smith’s followers
are conveniently teleported to safety, and Smith gives advice from the afterlife
on how his huge fortune can be used to build up his church, evangelise the
Earth and change human mores forever.
I
was sorry to have to tell my friend how amazed I was that this bundle of bilge
and half-baked ideas could be taken seriously by any adult reader. As in so
much science fiction, the level of ideas is not high. Comments on art,
religion, sex and so forth come across as, at best, undergraduate discussions,
and the rambling plot cannot disguise their flimsiness. Was this really the
great satire on religion, and the great attack on received sexual norms, which
I had been told it was?
It’s
probably a bit unfair to point out the many topical references that have faded
(gossip-columnists are called “winchells”; political commentators are called
“lippmanns”). But it’s not unfair at all to show how much this all plays as a
Californian surfie’s sexual daydream. Jubal’s ideal sex life – three nubile
young women look after him – resembles an early 1960s Playboy–inflected male version of sexual liberation. And though I
often find third-wave feminists annoying, I cannot but agree with those of them
who have criticised this book for its idiotic version of what women are.
Then
there is an incredibly evasive made-up blur-word that frequently occurs in Stranger in a Strange Land. The word
“grok” is used to mean something like “intuit and fully comprehend” by
Martians. Smith “groks” many things which we are invited to see as signs of his
superhuman intelligence and his superhuman morality. It is interesting, then,
that Smith “groks a wrongness” in
homosexuality, which shows how much Stranger
in a Strange Land itself reflects a past set of norms. Nirvana, for the
followers of the Martian, is unrestrained heterosexual shagging.
To
contexualise things, I should say a few more words about Robert Heinlein. He
trained as a naval officer. He dabbled in politics and was originally a “liberal”.
But he turned right in the 1950s, outraged that some people, as he saw it,
jeopardised America’s security by questioning the manufacture of nuclear
weapons. He now identified as a conservative libertarian and he supported the
very right-wing Barry Goldwater’s presidential campaign in 1964. Along with all
the libertarian stuff about free and unrestrained sex, his books show also a
strong belief in the need for a powerful military order. For example his
juvenile book Starship Troopers makes
military service a requirement for citizenship.
Much
of Heinlein’s output, including Stranger
in a Strange Land, is simply a projection of the idea that, behind the
protection of a strong military, Americans should be able to live a sybaritic
life of uncommitted sex.
When
the novel first appeared in 1961, enthusiasts said it showed the way to a
future of human liberation from oppressive sexual morality. In the 1960s the
novel was a hippie favourite, and was the basis for a Californian cult. I
repectfully suggest, it didn’t show the way to the future. At best, it showed
the way to some of the dippier aspects of the 1960s, and it can now safely be
forgotten.
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