A Tip of the Hat to Bobby H. on the Occasion of His Birthday!

A Tip of the Hat to Bobby H. on the Occasion of His Birthday! July 7, 2015

heinlein

This is quite the day. Among many other things it is World (or, International) Chocolate Day, as well as, as pretty much any flying saucer enthusiast can tell you the day in 1947 when when a flying saucer crashed near Roswell, New Mexico. ‘Tis also in 1954 the day Elvis Presley was first heard on radio, when his freshly minted “That’s All Right” debuted on WHBQ in Memphis.

Some ugly things happened on this day, as well.

But, I have to go with the fact it is Robert Heinlein‘s birthday. He was born on this day in 1907, in Butler, MO.

As an adolescent he was probably my favorite writer. A complicated character, whatever else might be said of him, he certainly always was interesting. The Wikipedia article on Heinlein quotes Ted Gioia observing how he has “been accused of many things—of being a libertine or a libertarian, a fascist or a fetishist, pre-Oedipal or just plain preposterous. Heinlein’s critics cut across all ends of the political spectrum, as do his fans. His admirers have ranged from Madalyn Murray O’Hair, the founder of American Atheists, to members of the Church of All Worlds, who hail Heinlein as a prophet. Apparently both true believers and non-believers, and perhaps some agnostics, have found sustenance in Heinlein’s prodigious output.”

What could a teenaged boy looking out from a particularly constrained life hope for more than someone who said sex was okay, racism was wrong, and that above all the individual should be completely autonomous?

As an adult I would say that last part misses some serious complications of the real world, where we must deal with the messy twin truths that the individual is totally unique, never to be repeated, and we are totally woven out of each other and the world, with some heavy responsibilities that extend out beyond our skins…

But, for today, just a small thank you to someone who was important to me at a difficult phase in my life, and who offered perspectives that I would continue to say were more healthful than not.


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