The Rolling Stones (novel)

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
The Rolling Stones
File:Rs52.jpg
First edition cover
Author Robert A. Heinlein
Cover artist Clifford Geary
Country United States
Language English
Series Heinlein juveniles
Genre Science fiction novel
Publisher Charles Scribner's Sons
Publication date
1952
Media type Print (Hardcover & Paperback)
Preceded by Between Planets
Followed by Starman Jones

The Rolling Stones (also published under the name Space Family Stone in the United Kingdom) is a 1952 science fiction novel by Robert A. Heinlein.

A condensed version of the novel had been published earlier in Boys' Life (September, October, November, December 1952) under the title "Tramp Space Ship". It was published in hardcover that year by Scribner's as part of the Heinlein juveniles.

Plot summary

The Stones, a family of "Loonies" (residents of the Moon, known as "Luna" in Latin), purchase and rebuild a used spaceship, and go sightseeing around the solar system.

The twin teenage boys, Castor and Pollux, buy used bicycles to sell on Mars, their first stop, where they run afoul of import regulations and are freed by their grandmother Hazel Stone. While on Mars, the twins buy their brother Buster a native Martian creature called a flat cat, born pregnant and producing a soothing vibration, as a pet.

In the Asteroid Belt, where the equivalent of a gold rush is in progress prospecting for radioactive ores, the twins obtain supplies and luxury goods, on the principle that it is mostly shopkeepers, not miners, who get rich during gold rushes. En route, the flat cat and its offspring overpopulate the ship, so that the family places them in hibernation, and later sells them to the miners. Subsequently, the family sets out to see the rings of Saturn.

Research

Heinlein and his wife Virginia spent hours in research, fiercely dedicated to getting it right for their readers.[1]

Influences

Heinlein later credited the 1905 Ellis Parker Butler short story "Pigs is Pigs" with informing the flat cat incident. A similar concept and plotline appeared in the Star Trek episode "The Trouble With Tribbles". According to screenwriter David Gerrold, the show's producers noticed similarities in the two stories and asked Heinlein for permission to use the idea.[2] Heinlein asked for an autographed copy of the script, but otherwise did not object, noting that both stories owed something to the Butler story "and possibly to Noah".[3]

Connections to other Heinlein works

The book makes several references to Hazel Stone as an influential figure in founding the Lunar colony. Fourteen years later, Heinlein published The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, which tells the story of a Lunar revolution, including a small but vital role that Hazel Stone played as a child (specifics of this role are nowhere evident in "The Rolling Stones", she is portrayed here simply as a "founding colonist"). Hazel, Castor, and Pollux reappear in The Number of the Beast and The Cat Who Walks Through Walls. Hazel, alone, appears in To Sail Beyond the Sunset.

Dr. Lowell Stone ("Buster") is quoted in interstitial material in The Cat Who Walks Through Walls and referenced as Chief Surgeon at Ceres General. In that same book, Hazel states that Roger and Edith are now living in the extrasolar colony known as Fiddler's Green (itself first named in Friday).

The generic description of the Martian met by Lowell is similar to the description of the Martians depicted in Stranger in a Strange Land and Red Planet.

Reception

Groff Conklin described the novel as "a thoroughly delightful job".[4] Boucher and McComas praised it as "easily the most plausible, carefully detailed picture of an interplanetary future we will encounter in any year".[5] P. Schuyler Miller cited the novel's "freshness and simplicity," characterizing it as "a life-size portrait-gallery of real people living in a real world of the future, every detail of which fits into place with top-tolerance precision".[6]

Surveying Heinlein's juvenile novels, Jack Williamson characterized Heinlein's story as "a dream of personal freedom" written with "an enviable craftsmanship", noted that the novel "carries its thematic burden tightly", unlike Heinlein's later adult novels, and praised The Rolling Stones for its "sense of an accurately extrapolated future background, with all of the new technologies given an air of commonplace reality".[7]

References

  1. Essay by Gregory Benford, 2011
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. "Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf", Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1953, p.115
  5. "Recommended Reading," F&SF, February 1953, p.74
  6. "The Reference Library", Astounding Science Fiction, May 1953, p.148
  7. Jack Williamson, "Youth Against Space," Algol 17, 1977, p.12.

External links