Robert A. Heinlein
Robert Anson Heinlein (1907-1988), was born in Butler, Missouri, to a German-American family with generations of military service in it. He became one of the most celebrated and influential science fiction writers of the 20th Century. A US Naval Academy graduate with engineering training, he brought to the wild-west-type field of science fiction of the pulp era a rigorous scientific mind and a temperment to question all assumptions of the genre, of society, and of human history and of the human future.
Upon medical discharge from the Navy in 1934, he turned to several pursuits, finally ending up writing with a first short story publication in 1939. Initially, he was one of the stable of writers of the legendary editor of Astounding, John W. Campbell, Jr., but Heinlein was too independent a spirit to follow an editor — he would always rather blaze new trails. Professional and financial security came with an epic series of so-called “juveniles” written for about 10 years from the late Forties to the late Fifties. These transformed themselves into sophisticated cultural critiques from Starship Troopers (1959) and Stranger in a Strange Land (1961) onwards.
He brought the verbal gymnastics of George Bernard Shaw and the adventurous pace of Rudyard Kipling to a pulp genre struggling for self-confidence and literary legitimacy. Whatever his provocations (and there are many for his readers from all backgrounds), he raised the standard of great speculative fiction. A tip on beginning Heinlein: begin with the early novels, even the excellent juveniles, plunge into those written in the Sixties, and then tackle the big ambitious novels of his late period. Enjoy the ride!
L'Âge des étoiles [Time for the Stars]
L'Âge des étoiles [Time for the Stars]
Avec la surpopulation qui épuise les ressources de la Terre, la nécessité de trouver de nouveaux mondes habitables est devenue plus urgente encore en ce début de quatrième millénaire. Cependant, si le voyage interplanétaire est devenu techniquement possible, les vaisseaux spatiaux voyageront moins vite que la lumière et communiquer avec la Terre prendra chaque fois des années. Mais l'Institut de Recherches Prospectives a découvert une solution inattendue à ce dilemme : la télépathie. C'est ainsi que Pat, un adolescent extraverti, et son jumeau Tom vont pouvoir mettre leurs dons exceptionnels au service du grand projet de colonisation interstellaire. Tandis que Pat vieillira sur la Terre, Tom et tout l'équipage de l'Elsie échapperont à l'emprise du temps. Mais ces explorateurs d'un genre nouveau auront-ils jamais la chance de revoir le monde qu'ils ont quitté au terme des aventures extraordinaires qui les attendent dans les profondeurs de l'espace ?
From Goodreads: This is one of the classic titles originally know as the "Heinlein Juveniles," written in the 1950 and published for the young adult market.
Travel to other planets is a reality, and with overpopulation stretching the resources of Earth, the necessity to find habitable worlds is growing ever more urgent. With no time to wait years for communication between slower-than-light spaceships and home, the Long Range Foundation explores an unlikely solution--human telepathy.
Identical twins Tom and Pat are enlisted to be the human radios that will keep the ships in contact with Earth. The only problem is that one of them has to stay behind, and that one will grow old while the other explores the depths of space. Always a master of insight into the human consequences of future technologies, this is one of Heinlein's triumphs.