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Starship Troopers
 
 

Starship Troopers [Mass Market Paperback]

Robert A. Heinlein
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (533 customer reviews)
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Juan Rico signed up with the Federal Reserve on a lark, but despite the hardships and rigorous training, he finds himself determined to make it as a cap trooper. In boot camp he will learn how to become a soldier, but when he graduates and war comes (as it always does for soldiers), he will learn why he is a soldier. Many consider this Hugo Award winner to be Robert Heinlein's finest work, and with good reason. Forget the battle scenes and high-tech weapons (though this novel has them)--this is Heinlein at the top of his game talking people and politics.

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A recruit of the future goes through the toughest boot camp in the universe and into battle with the Terran Mobile Infantry against humankind's most frightening enemy. Reissue.

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Customer Reviews

533 Reviews
5 star:
 (366)
4 star:
 (76)
3 star:
 (46)
2 star:
 (26)
1 star:
 (19)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (533 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Preconceptions galour, Jun 25 2003
Well, for starters, let me say that the reason this book got a mediocure score from me is that I, unfortunately, had a lot of preconceptions and misconceptions about this book when I first picked it up. You see, Starship Troopers is one of my all-time favorite movies and that sole reason is what gave me the determination to plow through this rather dense, at times, book. The book standing alone (without the hinderance and blessings of seeing the movie beforehand) would receive about a 2. It's really compelling at times (with its insightful views into moralities and political philosophies) and at other times down right dreadful. The scarce battles seem to be an afterthought, with not much care or effort put into them. The biggest bust is the very anti-climatic way the story is resolved. And then there's the nagging sensation you get whenever the author plows away on another seemingly irrelevant tangent, though, in fairness, it sheds some much needed light on the story in the end. All in all (as much as it hurts to say), the movie was much better (even though the book preceeded it). I never thought it possible that a movie based on a book could be better than the book itself, and in some ways it's not fair to say that it is because the movie couldn't exist without the book, right? Well, I now stand corrected and it can be done. If you liked the movie, you might just want to read this to compare and contrast, or if you're interested in political philosophies, but otherwise, steer clear of this one.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Action-packed and thought-provoking reading, Nov 12 2002
By 
Daniel Jolley "darkgenius" (Shelby, North Carolina USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Starship Troopers (Mass Market Paperback)
For me, Starship Troopers is all the proof you need in order to name Robert Heinlein science fiction's greatest writer. I am getting in the bad habit of naming specific Heinlein books to be his very best, only to find that the next novel I pick up is even better than the last one. This particular novel is fascinating on a number of levels. There is nothing really special about Johnnie Rico; he's a normal lad who decides to join the military, ostensibly at the time in order to gain citizenship. In this future Terran confederation, only those who serve in the military are awarded citizenship and granted the privilege to vote. The government actually discourages volunteers and makes boot camp so difficult that only men with proper soldier qualities get through it. On the broadest level, we see Rico's progression from harrowed recruit to active service in the Mobile Infantry to combat against the Klendathu. I have no military background at all, but I found Heinlein's descriptions of military life and actual combat to be detailed and thrilling. We watch Johnnie Rico become a soldier. Along the way, he figures out why he actually did volunteer, developing a whole new outlook on duty and responsibility.

I don't want to delve too deeply into the politics of this novel. Some have pinned a fascist connotation on it, but I try to examine this future society philosophically. Only those who serve in the military can vote, but the vast majority of people choose not to serve and live happy lives as civilians, so I don't see anything fascist about this society. What intrigues me most, and it is this that sets this book apart from the vast majority of science fiction, is Heinlein's thought-provoking ideas about ethics, morality, duty, responsibility, etc. Mr. Dubois, Ricco's high school instructor in History and Moral Philosophy (a required course for all) gets in the ring and dukes it out with Plato, John Locke, and a host of other political thinkers. He argues that man has no natural moral instinct; morality is acquired by the individual and is an elaboration of the instinct to survive. If an individual is not taught the lessons of living in society, he will not learn that the basis of all morality is duty. In this way he criticizes the democracies of the late twentieth century and explains their ultimate failure. The promotion of the idea that certain natural rights are necessarily due each person caused young people to neglect their duties--by concentrating on the rights they think are due them. Liberty and freedom must be earned and paid for, and democracies failed because they did not understand this basic tenet. These kinds of ideas are the source of most of the criticisms directed toward Starship Troopers. I found many cogent arguments in the novel; criticism of democracy is not an endorsement of totalitarianism. Many would agree with some of the ideas Mr. Dubois puts forth (and which find their way into various places elsewhere in the book), but any agreement or disagreement should be purely intellectual. Great fiction is supposed to make us think deeply about important concepts, and Starship Troopers succeeds admirably in that regard.

Thus, Starship Troopers provides science fiction fans the best of both worlds. On the one hand, we have the well-told, gripping story of one man's military journey from boot camp to battlefields of war light years away from home, replete with several intense combat scenes. On the other hand, we have ideas of a political and philosophical nature laid out extremely well by the author, which is all but guaranteed to make you seriously think about society, government, and warfare. In the end, duty and responsibility are stressed if not glorified, and I find nothing at all subversive in that. Heinlein tells a fascinating story, and he makes you think, whether you want to or not. Few are the writers who can claim such lofty credentials.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Dry for Heinlein, Dec 12 2000
By 
G. Wilde "Wha Wha" (Portland, OR USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Starship Troopers (Mass Market Paperback)
I am a Heinlein fan. Stranger in a Strange Land, Friday, and The Moon is a Harsh Mistress I have all loved and read more than once. Actually, Stranger is my favorite book of all time. Be that as it may, I was shocked at how dry and shallow I found this book. No real characters, only names. No depth to the story, just an interstellar space war. It would have made a great comic book, I guess. 2 stars instead of one because I've read worse (it could have been boring and not just flat and lost.) Please, read everything else you can by Heinlein, but let this one go.
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