Robert A. Heinlein/Works
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Novels
Novels marked with an asterisk * are generally considered juvenile novels, although some works defy easy categorization.
Early Heinlein novels
- Rocket Ship Galileo, 1947 *
- Beyond This Horizon, 1948 (initially serialized in 1942, and at that time credited to Anson MacDonald)
- Space Cadet, 1948 *
- Red Planet, 1949 * (Prometheus Hall of Fame Award, 1996)
- Sixth Column, 1949 (initially serialized in 1941, and at that time credited to Anson MacDonald) (aka: The Day After Tomorrow)
- Farmer in the Sky, 1950 (Retro Hugo Award, 1951) *
- Between Planets, 1951 *
- The Puppet Masters, 1951 (re-published posthumously with excisions restored, 1990)
- The Rolling Stones, 1952 (aka: Space Family Stone) *
- Starman Jones, 1953 *
- The Star Beast, 1954 *
- Tunnel in the Sky, 1955 *
- Double Star, 1956 (Hugo Award, 1956)
- Time for the Stars, 1956 *
- Citizen of the Galaxy, 1957 *
- The Door into Summer, 1957
- Have Space Suit—Will Travel, 1958 *
- Methuselah's Children, 1958 (originally a serialized short story in 1941; Prometheus Hall of Fame Award, 1997)
- Starship Troopers, 1959 (Hugo Award, 1960)
Mature Heinlein novels
- Stranger in a Strange Land, 1961 (Hugo Award, 1962; Prometheus Hall of Fame Award, 1987), (republished at the original greater length in 1991)
- Podkayne of Mars, 1963 *
- Orphans of the Sky, 1963 (fix-up novel of two connected novellas, both originally published in 1941)
- Glory Road, 1963 (Hugo nominee, 1964)
- Farnham's Freehold, 1965
- The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, 1966 (Hugo Award, 1967; Nebula Award nominee, 1967)
- I Will Fear No Evil, 1970 (Seiun Award for best foreign novel, 1978)
- Time Enough for Love, 1973 (Hugo, Nebula, and Jupiter Award nominee, 1974; Prometheus Hall of Fame Award, 1998)
Late Heinlein novels
- The Number of the Beast, 1980
- Friday, 1982 (Hugo, Nebula, and Prometheus Award nominee, 1983)
- Job: A Comedy of Justice, 1984 (Hugo and Nebula Award nominee, 1985)
- The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, 1985
- To Sail Beyond the Sunset, 1987 (Prometheus Award nominee, 1989)
Early Heinlein works published posthumously
- For Us, The Living: A Comedy of Customs (written in 1939, published posthumously in 2003)
- Variable Star (posthumously with Spider Robinson) (Outline written by Heinlein 1955; Robinson's full novel based on 8 recovered pages from it appeared in 2006)
Short fiction
"Future History" short fiction
(Series nominated for the "Best All-Time Series" Hugo Award, 1966)
- "Life-Line", 1939
- "Misfit", 1939
- "The Roads Must Roll", 1940
- "Requiem", 1940 (Prometheus Hall of Fame Award, 2003, also nominated 2002)
- ""If This Goes On—"", 1940
- "Coventry", 1940
- "Blowups Happen", 1940
- "Universe", 1941
- ""—We Also Walk Dogs"" 1941 (as Anson MacDonald)
- "Common Sense", 1941
- "Methuselah's Children", 1941 (lengthened and published as a novel, 1958)
- "Logic of Empire", 1941
- "Space Jockey", 1947
- ""It's Great to Be Back!"", 1947
- "The Green Hills of Earth", 1947
- "Ordeal in Space", 1948
- "The Long Watch", 1948
- "Gentlemen, Be Seated!", 1948
- "The Black Pits of Luna", 1948
- "Delilah and the Space Rigger", 1949
- "The Man Who Sold the Moon", 1951, (Retro Hugo Award)
- "The Menace From Earth", 1957
- "Searchlight", 1962
Other short speculative fiction
Note that all the works initially attributed to Anson MacDonald, Caleb Saunders, John Riverside and Simon York, and many of the works attributed to Lyle Monroe, were later reissued in various Heinlein collections and attributed to Heinlein.
At Heinlein's insistence, the three Lyle Monroe stories marked with the symbol '§' have never been reissued in a Heinlein anthology.
- "Magic, Inc.", 1940 (aka: "The Devil Makes the Law")
- "Solution Unsatisfactory", 1940 (as Anson MacDonald)
- "Let There Be Light", 1940 (as Lyle Monroe)
- "Successful Operation" 1940 (aka: "Heil!") (as Lyle Monroe)
- "They", 1941
- ""—And He Built a Crooked House—"", 1941
- "By His Bootstraps", 1941 (as Anson MacDonald)
- "Lost Legacy", 1941 (aka: "Lost Legion") (as Lyle Monroe)
- "Elsewhen", 1941 (aka: "Elsewhere") (as Caleb Saunders)
- § "Beyond Doubt", 1941 (as Lyle Monroe with Elma Wentz)
- "The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag", 1942 (as John Riverside)
- "Waldo", 1942 (as Anson MacDonald)
- § ""My Object All Sublime"", 1942 (as Lyle Monroe)
- "Goldfish Bowl", 1942 (as Anson MacDonald)
- § "Pied Piper", 1942 (as Lyle Monroe)
- "Free Men", 1946 (published 1966)
- "Jerry Was a Man", 1947
- "Columbus Was a Dope", 1947 (as Lyle Monroe)
- "On the Slopes of Vesuvius", 1947
- "Our Fair City", 1948
- "Gulf", 1949
- "Nothing Ever Happens on the Moon", 1949
- "Destination Moon", 1950
- "The Year of the Jackpot", 1952
- "Project Nightmare", 1953
- "Sky Lift", 1953
- "Tenderfoot in Space", 1956 (serialized 1958)
- "The Man Who Traveled in Elephants", 1957 (aka: "The Elephant Circuit")
- "All You Zombies—", 1959 (Balrog Award, 1980)
Other short fiction
- "A Bathroom of Her Own", 1946
- "Dance Session", 1946 (love poem)
- "The Witch's Daughters", 1946 (poem)
- "Water Is for Washing", 1947
- "They Do It with Mirrors", 1947 (as Simon York)
- "Poor Daddy", 1949
- "Cliff and the Calories", 1950
- "The Bulletin Board", 1951
Collections
- The Man Who Sold the Moon, 1950
- Waldo & Magic, Inc., 1950
- The Green Hills of Earth, 1951
- Assignment in Eternity, 1953
- Revolt in 2100, 1953
- The Robert Heinlein Omnibus, 1958
- The Menace From Earth, 1959
- The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag, 1959 (aka: 6 X H)
- Three by Heinlein, 1965
- A Robert Heinlein Omnibus, 1966
- The Worlds of Robert A. Heinlein, 1966
- The Past Through Tomorrow, 1967
- The Best of Robert A. Heinlein, 1973
- Expanded Universe, 1980
- A Heinlein Trio, 1980: The Puppet Masters, Double Star, and The Door Into Summer
- The Fantasies of Robert A. Heinlein, 1999
- Infinite Possibilities, 2003: Tunnel in the Sky, Time for the Stars, and Citizen of the Galaxy
- To the Stars, 2004: Between Planets, The Rolling Stones, Starman Jones, and The Star Beast
- Off the Main Sequence, 2005 (short stories including three never before collected)
- Four Frontiers, 2005: Rocket Ship Galileo, Space Cadet, Red Planet, and Farmer in the Sky
- Outward Bound, 2006: Have Space Suit—Will Travel, Starship Troopers, Podkayne of Mars
Complete works
- The Virginia Edition, a 46-volume hardcover collection of all of Robert Heinlein's stories, novels, and nonfiction writing, plus a selection of his personal correspondence, was announced by Meisha Merlin Publishing in 2005; the Robert A. and Virginia Heinlein Prize Trust (which now owns all the Heinlein copyrights) instigated the project. Although Meisha Merlin's Web page remains upTemplate:Ref, the company went out of business in May 2007 after producing six volumes: I Will Fear No Evil, Time Enough for Love, Starship Troopers, For Us, the Living, The Door into Summer, and Double Star. The Trust is now in the process of picking up the piecesTemplate:Ref.
(NOTE: In July 2007, the Heinlein Prize Trust opened the online Heinlein Archives [see link below], which enables anyone to view the manuscript versions of all Heinlein's works.)
Foreword
- Tomorrow, the Stars, 1952, anthology of stories by 14 authors selected by Frederik Pohl and Judith Merril, foreword by Heinlein who got his name on the cover.
Nonfiction
- No Bands Playing, No Flags Flying, written 1947, published 1973
- Two articles for Encyclopædia Britannica on Paul Dirac and antimatter, and on blood chemistry.Template:Ref
- Grumbles from the Grave, 1989 (posthumously; Hugo Award nominee for best nonfiction book, 1990)
- Take Back Your Government: A Practical Handbook for the Private Citizen, 1992
- Tramp Royale, 1992
Filmography
- Destination Moon (story (from the book Rocket Ship Galileo), screenplay, technical advisor), 1950[1] (Retro Hugo Award, 1951)
- Tom Corbett, Space Cadet, 1950, (from the book Space Cadet)[2]
- Project Moonbase, 1953[3]
- The Brain Eaters, 1959, (from the book The Puppet Masters, uncredited, sued by Heinlein)[4]
- Uchu no Senshi (Japanese) (TV series based on Starship Troopers) (1988) ANN
- Red Planet, TV mini-series (from the book), 1994[5]
- The Puppet Masters (film), film (from the book), 1994[6]
- Starship Troopers, film loosely based on the book, 1997[7]
- Roughnecks: The Starship Troopers Chronicles, TV series (based on the movie, which was loosely based on the book Starship Troopers), 1999[8]
- (as yet untitled, from the book The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, in pre-production) [1]
Spinoffs
- The Notebooks of Lazarus Long, illuminated by D.F Vassallo, 1978
- New Destinies, Vol. VI/Winter 1988 — Robert A. Heinlein Memorial Issue, 1988
- Fate's Trick by Matt Costello, 1988, a "game book" inspired by Glory Road
- Requiem: New Collected Works by Robert A. Heinlein and Tributes to the Grand Master, 1992
- Two different Starship Troopers (board game) board games were published by Avalon Hill in 1976 and 1997
- Dimension X, science fiction radio programs in 1950-1951. Among other writers, episodes were based on Heinlein's Destination Moon (film) (ep. 12), The Green Hills of Earth (ep. 10), Requiem, The Roads Must Roll, and Universe.
- X Minus One, radio series in 1955-1958: Universe
- Language arts materials for teachers based on Heinlein's works, in support of World Space Week, 2005.
Notes
- http://www.nitrosyncretic.com/rah/rahfaq.html
- http://www.virginiaedition.com/default.aspx
- http://virginiaedition.blogspot.com/
- Encyclopædia Britannica articles: on Paul Dirac and antimatter, and on blood chemistry. A version of the former, titled "Paul Dirac, Antimatter, and You," was published in the anthology Expanded Universe, and demonstrates both Heinlein's skill as a popularizer and his lack of depth in physics; an afterword gives a normalization equation and presents it, incorrectly as being the Dirac equation.
See also
Notes
- ↑ Destination Moon (1950). American Film Institute. Retrieved on 3 October 2013.
- ↑ Tom Corbett, Space Cadet (1950-1955). TV.com. Retrieved on 3 October 2013.
- ↑ Project Moon Base (1953). American Film Institute. Retrieved on 3 October 2013.
- ↑ The Brain Eaters (1958). American Film Institute. Retrieved on 3 October 2013.
- ↑ Red Planet (1994). Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved on 3 October 2013.
- ↑ Robert A. Heinlein's The Puppet Masters (1994). American Film Institute. Retrieved on 3 October 2013.
- ↑ Starship Troopers (1997). American Film Institute. Retrieved on 3 October 2013.
- ↑ Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles (1999-2000). TV.com. Retrieved on 3 October 2013.