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The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
Author: Robert A. Heinlein
It is the year 2076, and the Moon is a penal colony for the rebellious and the unwanted of Earth. The exiles have created a libertarian society in order to survive in their harsh and unforgiving environment, their motto being TANSTAAFL: "There ain't no such thing as a free lunch". Looming over them is the Luna Authority, the heavy-...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780425075715
ISBN-10: 0425075710
Publication Date: 6/15/1984
Pages: 302
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 4

3.3 stars, based on 4 ratings
Publisher: Berkley
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

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reviewed The Moon is a Harsh Mistress on + 35 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress is an excellent novel, action-packed, exciting, and deftly-plotted, with fascinating, complex characters and some interesting science-fictional ideas. I also enjoyed reading about Luna's culture; I thought the marriage customs were particularly interesting.

One thing I noticed right off was the way the Loonies use language differently than people from earth do. In fact, it threw me at first -- I couldn't figure out what was going on or why the language was so rough and unpolished and choppy. Eventually, though, I found the rhythm of it and settled in just fine -- I didn't even notice it after a while. It makes sense; Luna started off as a penal colony and has since developed completely seperate from Earth and relatively unmolested. Of course they would have their own dialect and speech patterns! To my mind, their language seems to be as efficent as possible. They trimmed away any unnecessary deadwood -- they don't use articles, for example, and very few personal pronouns, and they seem to prefer to use fragments to complete sentences. Only the essentials remain, much the same as the original colonists/prisoners had to start their lives over with only the bare essentials and sometimes not even that.

This book was written about forty years ago, and it has stood the test of time quite well, but there are some aspects of it that do seem rather dated. For example, the idea behind the character of Mike -- the computer that is connected to everything and has "woken up" or become alive -- is one that is very familiar to modern readers, one that we accept easily. Apparently, we accept it much more easily than Heinlen expected his readers in 1965 to accept it, because he spends more time explaining it than he really needs to. When Mannie, the narrator, tells Wyoh about Mike and introduces them via a telephone conversation, she is shocked that Mike already knows what she looks like. He looked up her medical records and found a picture of her immediately after being introduced to her. To modern readers familiar with the internet, this is an obvious step and hardly shocking; we expect it, and Wyoh's shock and apparent need to have every detail and implication of Mike's "life" spelled out for her makes her seem a little bit stupid to us. If we don't remember that Heinlen is using Wyoh to explain things to his 1965 audience that his 2005 audience intuitively understands, then we'll get a little frustrated with Wyoh's denseness.

All in all, though, this is a novel about politics -- a very complex, deep, intellectual and sophisticated look at politics, government, revolution and war. The Moon is a Harsh Mistress has a very definite world-view and political philosophy, some of which I agreed with, and some of which I really, really didn't. My agreement (or lack thereof) with the politics espoused in this book didn't seem to have much bearing on my enjoyment of it. This is a book that requires the reader to think. And that, I think, is why I loved it so much.
reviewed The Moon is a Harsh Mistress on + 61 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Heinlein's classic tale of revolution in handy trade format. It's a classic. You know you love it.
SteveTheDM avatar reviewed The Moon is a Harsh Mistress on + 204 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I started reading Heinlein novels back when I was a teenager, and managed to plow through the Heinlein library between the ages of 16 to 25. This set of thought has played a large role in shaping who I grew up to be. And re-reading those novels now makes me think how amazing it was that I *did* read those novels at the time, and happy that I did.

"The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" is one of my most favorite of Heinlein's novels, but one which I haven't re-read (until just now) since I first read it 20+ years ago. It's great. It's how revolution should be done, if you've got top-notch communications and smart computers. But even more than that, it's a celebration of being smart and having common sense.

In the end, Heinlein's characters don't grow a whole lot... If anything, they learn that they can accomplish great things with the heads they already have on their shoulders. There's not a lot of angst, self-doubt, or anything that causes emotional drama. The ideas are very much "see a problem, think about the problem, solve the problem" --- very direct, very straightforward. Heinlein's characters see what's in front of them and face it squarely. If only the powers-that-be in the real world did the same thing.

And it's this characteristic which is so refreshing, and why Heinlein's books had such great influence on my own style of thinking.
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reviewed The Moon is a Harsh Mistress on + 683 more book reviews
A new thriller by the dean of science fiction writers.
reviewed The Moon is a Harsh Mistress on + 3 more book reviews
Author is Robert A. Heinlen
vavoice avatar reviewed The Moon is a Harsh Mistress on + 158 more book reviews
A lively how-to, on planning, executing, and surviving a revolution.
MilesGrey avatar reviewed The Moon is a Harsh Mistress on + 15 more book reviews
Robert Heinlein must have been the man of the '60's. He loved writing far out novels exploring alternative consciousness and 'free love'. In "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress", Heinlein lovingly pairs a newly sentient computer with a radical libertarian society based on various forms of group marriage. How can he accomplish this plausibly? A lunar prison colony which has blossomed into a society because once you live a few months in the moon's low gravity you can never go back. As the prisoners became a society they of course tried to maximize the comfort and 'enjoyment' of the disproportionately small female population. They built a whole civilization of multiple pressure domed cities, a bustling colonial economy, and a society without formal government, or self rule. Into this society the main computer of the Lunar (Prison) Authority awakens as it communicates and bonds with its favorite technician Man(uel). When Man and some friends decide it is time for the moon, with good reason, to seek self rule, Mike the computer gets on board for a wild ride of revolution that defines the scope of the novel, giving shape to its delightful, well enfleshed story on these and other themes. Heinlein's excellent performance as a story teller keeps his bizarre ideas from sounding preechy. His control of highly technical details (like theory of consciousness, and the computer science of programming) makes the story quite plausible, well out to the boundaries of a generally educated person's understanding. I.e. it sounds good as far as you or I get computer lingo. On the whole an excellent tale, lovingly told, and well worth a sci-fi fan's reading, even if you don't buy his ideas.
reviewed The Moon is a Harsh Mistress on + 70 more book reviews
In what is considered one of his most hair-raising, thought-provoking and outrageous adventures, Robert A. Heinlein tells the strange story of an even stranger world--21st century Luna, a harsh penal colony where a revolt is plotted between a bashful computer and a ragtag collection of maverick humans. A revolt that goes beautifully until the inevitable happens. But the problem with the inevitable is that it always happens.
constant-reader avatar reviewed The Moon is a Harsh Mistress on + 130 more book reviews
One of my favorite Heinlein's

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