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Revolt in 2100 & Methuselah's Children
 
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Revolt in 2100 & Methuselah's Children (Library Binding)

by Robert A. Heinlein (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

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"Revolt in 2100": After the fall of the American Ayatollahs (as foretold in "Stranger in a Strange Land") there is a Second American Revolution; for the first time in human history there is a land with Liberty and Justice for All. "Methuselah's Children": Americans are fiercely proud of the freedom they seized in "Revolt in 2100". Nothing could make them forswear it. Nothing except the secret of immortality. --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

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14 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:    (0)
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4.0 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars 4 stories for the price of one..., April 25 2003
These were some of Heinlein's earlier works, and as such, don't have the length and depth of some of his later, Hugo-Award winning works. Here's a short synopsis and review of each of the four stories. The first and the last are longer, multi-chaptered "short books", while the two in the middle can more appropriately be termed short-stories.

Revolt in 2100 - America is now a theocratic dictatorship ruled by the "Prophet" who is really a corrupt leader dependent upon brutal suppression of dissidents to maintain power. John Lyle, the main character, is a graduate of West Point and a young officer who, through the love of a priestess, joins the Revolution and overthrows this dictatorship. The story is somewhat shallow for those who are familiar with Heinlein's later works, but it is still entertaining. One thing Heinlein never did well was write romance. The interactions between his male and female characters are awkward - had he developed the talent for it, he could really flesh out the motives of many of his characters.

Coventry - Dave McKinnon, banished to "Coventry" for striking a man and refusing psycological adjustment, finds out just how brutal and uncivilized man can be when he enters the wall-less prison. A nice short story, but with an unresolved (and somewhat predictable) ending

Misfit - Here we are introduced to A.J. Libby, who will play a part in the next story. He is a young man working in a space construction crew, but discovers that he has a remarkable talent for mathematics. Extremely short, its more like a preview for the last story included in the collection.

Methuselah's Children - The Howard Families - 100,000 members strong, are having their civil liberties trod upon because their unnatural lifespans lead other humans to believe they possess the "fountain of youth" Lazarus Long, a rogueish character, leads the Families to steal an interstellar spaceship and pilots it to two alien planets before finally returning to earth. This was by far the best of the four, very entertaining, but in some parts, Heinlein delves a little too far into esoteric subjects that are of interest only to physicists and theoretical mathematicians - there are passages I skipped because they proved too difficult to understand for someone just looking for a fun fiction experience.

Altogether, this is a worthwhile purchase.

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4.0 out of 5 stars A Good Book with Modern Implications, Dec 30 2002
By Ben Lazarus (Chapel Hill, NC USA) - See all my reviews
Revolt in 2100: Methusela's Children contains four separate Heinlein stories. The stories are grouped in chronological order and are all set in the same science fiction 'universe,' although they do not all directly related to one another. Like much of Robert Heinlein's work, Revolt in 2100 comments on modern political and social issues, while simultaneously entertaining all who read it.

The first story, Revolt in 2100, is startlingly relavent to today's times. In the story, America has been taken over by Religious Fundamentalists (the 'American Ayatollas' as one reviewer describes them). Heinlein shrewdly picks apart religious fundamentalism in this story, while not attacking the concept of religion itself.

I was extremely disappointed by the second story in the collection. I have read almost every single Heinlein science fiction noveland this second story was by far the worst. The plot has a beginning and a middle, then seems to sputter with no resolution. It left me wondering, "What the heck?!"

The third story of Revolt in 2100 presents a dystopian - or utopian, depending how you look at it - America in which every American is required by law to be nice to everyone else. The punishment for any 'anti-social' act is banishment to a place with greater personal liberties, but also less personal security. Like the first one, this story is relavent to our times in that it deals with the contemporary struggle between civil liberties and personal security security

The fourth novella is about a group of Americans who have acheived amazingly long life, but are persecuted by their short-lived peers and forced off the planet Earth. Although not the same caliber as Revolt in 2100, this story is nevertheless a fun and engaging Heinlein story.

Revolt in 2100: Methusela's Children shows that one rotten apple doesn't always spoil the barrel. I wholeheartedly reccomend it regardless of whether you're a longtime Heinlein fan or a first time reader.

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5.0 out of 5 stars lovely heinlein, just lovely, April 25 2002
By "tonetwelve" (poughkeepsie, ny) - See all my reviews
if you have not surmised, you are getting two books.

in revolt, you are getting three short stories

if this goes on, details the not so distant future, where america is isolated from the remainder of the world, through the implementation of a religous police state

coventry takes place after the 'revolt'
and deals with america as it could be...with 'liberty and justice for all'...as long as the all, want such things

misfits, introduces us to a wonderful young man...and a great heinlein character...andrew jackson libby, and details the creation of a space station

methuselah's children, is the first in the tales of lazarus long

wonderful wonderful stuff
fun technological things, and interesting plot developments.
if you have not read and of the other lazarus long stuff...read this first...i read 'time enough for love' before i read this...and once i read this, i wished i had read this first.
you can do it the other way, but a lot of things are clearer if you go in order

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Spiritual fuel for Transhuman aspirants.
Cryonicists and other immortalists love "Methuselah's Children," for obvious reasons. The males among us would like to be model ourselves on Lazarus Long, at least in... Read more
Published on Dec 17 2000 by M. A. Plus

4.0 out of 5 stars Some of the Stories that Made Heinlein's Reputation
There are two ways to appreciate this collection of two short stories, a novella, and a novel.

First is on its own merit. Read more

Published on Dec 15 2000 by Randy Stafford

5.0 out of 5 stars 3 1/2-4 stars for Revolt, 5 for Methuselah's Children
The two books (and four stories) that are included in this collection include the two most famous of the "Future History" stories, -If This Goes On and Metheselah's... Read more
Published on Nov 4 2000 by VoodooLord7

2.0 out of 5 stars Go get The Past Through Tomorrow
This collection consists mostly of the last stories in the Past Through Tomorrow. PTT may well be one of Heinein's masterworks, a collection of short stories that retells history... Read more
Published on Oct 26 2000 by J. A Magill

2.0 out of 5 stars More of Heinlein's religion-hatred and lousy science
This four-story collection contains two major, highly regarded Heinlein classics that really don't deserve such high regard. Read more
Published on Oct 20 2000

4.0 out of 5 stars The capstone of Heinlein's Future History
This volume is comprised of the two books that complete the original Future History series. More action-oriented than The Man Who Sold the Moon, and more focused than The Green... Read more
Published on Aug 3 2000 by Dave Deubler

2.0 out of 5 stars I must have missed something...
I couldn't put this book down...I just had to find the section where it finally got good enough to have been rated so highly by other readers. Unfortunately, I never found it. Read more
Published on May 8 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Fair Warning?
With the increasing militancy of the religious right in American society.. I like to pull this out once in a while to remind me why we need to be cautious. Read more
Published on Oct 14 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars Nothing this man writes should be pasted up!!
Robert A. Heinlein spins another tale the corners man in and shows all of his glory, as well as man's greed and stupidity. Read more
Published on Aug 6 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars First of all, I am a huge Heinlein fan...
... and this book really appealed to me for a few reasons. 1) Two stories (four, if you count the "Coventry" and "Misfit" as seperate, ("Coventry"... Read more
Published on April 15 1999

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