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The menace from earth

Front Cover
28 Reviews
New American Library, 1962 - Fiction - 189 pages
In gigantic caves on the Moon, the low gravity allows the colonists to achieve the age-old dream of strapping wings to their arms and flying like birds. But Holly Jones's other dreams are threatened by the arrival from Earth of a beautiful woman who has mesmerized her boyfriend. Back on Earth, a mathematician charts an upsurge in strange events to predict the most incredible event of all. Elsewhere, a man travels through a time gate into the future, seeking free will and finding something very different. A showcase for the talents of a master storyteller. Reprint.

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Review: The Menace from Earth

User Review  - Amanda - Goodreads

Heinlein is always good, and the title story is as good as I remember it. My only kind-of quibble is that I found many of the stories to be a little ... predictable. Archtypical. But since most of ... Read full review

Review: The Menace from Earth

User Review  - Cherie - Goodreads

This book has 7 short stories, written in the early 50s. They are all worth reading over and over, or once every 50 years, like I did. Read full review

All 21 reviews »

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Contents

table of contents
7
By His Bootstraps
39
Columbus Was a Dope
88
Copyright

4 other sections not shown

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From Google Scholar

The Future Of Lunar Tourism
Patrick Collins - 2004 - Science and Technology Series

About the author (1962)

Robert Anson Heinlein was born on July 7, 1907 in Butler, Mo. The son of Rex Ivar and Bam Lyle Heinlein, Robert Heinlein had two older brothers, one younger brother, and three younger sisters. Moving to Kansas City, Mo., at a young age, Heinlein graduated from Central High School in 1924 and attended one year of college at Kansas City Community College. Following in his older brother's footsteps, Heinlein entered the Navel Academy in 1925. After contracting pulmonary tuberculosis, of which he was later cured, Heinlein retired from the Navy and married Leslyn Macdonald. Heinlein was said to have held jobs in real estate and photography, before he began working as a staff writer for Upton Sinclair's EPIC News in 1938. Still needing money desperately, Heinlein entered a writing contest sponsored by the science fiction magazine Thrilling Wonder Stories. Heinlein wrote and submitted the story "Life-Line," which went on to win the contest. This guaranteed Heinlein a future in writing. Using his real name and the pen names Caleb Saunders, Anson MacDonald, Lyle Monroe, John Riverside, and Simon York, Heinlein wrote numerous novels including For Us the Living, Methuselah's Children, and Starship Troopers, which was adapted into a big-budget film for Tri-Star Pictures in 1997. Heinlein died in 1988 from emphysema and other related health problems. Heinlein's remains were scattered from the stern of a Navy warship off the coast of California.

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