[August 23, 1961] Lost in translation (Robert Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land)


by Rosemary Benton

I enjoy my science fiction in the evenings, when I can open the windows and let my tortoise, Mabel, out of her cage to meander around my condominium.  Both of us love these night time relaxations as a way to expunge stress and enjoy new environments.  For me, I get the opportunity to stretch my mind with speculative fiction, while Mabel enjoys the more humble tortoise pleasure of exploring nooks and crannies. 

On one such recent evening I looked at Mabel and felt a coincidental connection between our activities. For whatever reason, she was choosing to repeatedly walk in a wobbly circle from the couch to the table, to the wall, to the bookshelf, and then back to the couch.  This wouldn't have struck me so powerfully except for the fact that I was reading Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert A. Heinlein.  Like Mabel, I was not only willingly subjecting myself to drudgery, but I was engaged in a circular story that felt like it was going nowhere.

The premise of Stranger is interesting enough.  Conceived on Mars and raised by the Old Ones (the elders and collective holders of all Martian knowledge), Valentine Michael “Mike” Smith is the sole survivor of a scientific expedition sent from Earth to study the Red Planet.  Approximately 25 years and one world war later, mankind again makes a trip to Mars where they find Michael alive and well under the care of the Martians.  Mike makes the voyage back to Earth under the strict order of his surrogate parents, whereupon he is first taken to a hospital for observation by a purposefully all male staff. With his legal status up in the air, Smith is stuck between the odd position of being the Sovereign of Mars or a citizen of Earth's World Federation of Free Nations.  Eventually smuggled out of the hospital, Mike begins his life on Earth under the tutelage of his liberator, his lawyer, and his other “water-brothers”.  Stranger is the story of a man flung into an odd world of concepts, theories and rules, and the journey he takes to “grok” humanity and heal mankind of its self-inflicted wounds.

This is the story of the creation of a culture that is an amalgamation of human nature and Martian ideas.  It makes sense that on an Earth such as Heinlein creates, where religion is a powerful entity politically and socially, the journey of the main character would be one of a religious awakening.  A religious story of a naive boy growing into an enlightened man is virtually a cliche, but in the hands of the right author it can be given fresh life.  Was Heinlein the right author for this? Sort of. 

Despite my initial expectations about a story that promised to be part “coming of age” and part “survival in an alien culture”, Stranger in a Strange Land is a tedious read.  The first 200 pages are an almost moment-by-moment recount of The Man from Mars being brought to Earth, escaping the hospital with the help of a nurse named Gillian “Jill” Boardman, meeting her associate Jubal Harshaw, coming to trust Jubal and having lengthy and repetitive conversations with him as a burgeoning father figure/lawyer/interpreter/guide to human nature.

Often a conversation between characters will read like a transcript of a classrom group discussion set in wherein one person is the primary speaker and the rest of the group contributes small insights or asks for clarification.  Then the whole topic will be reintroduced, but from a different angle. It is immensely dry to read.

Heinlein takes great care to describe Mike's inner voice and his difficulty “grokking” or grasping human logic and concepts.  Slowly he teases out the special powers of perception and control over physics that Mike learned from the Martians.  At first, sections written from the perspective of Mike's mind were the most anticipated parts of the novel, but as Mike adapted and became more “human” in his thinking, the intrigue of his mind's workings likewise faded. 

Stranger contains a sizable cast of side characters including, but not limited to, the founder of the highly influential Church of the New Revelation (Fosterite), the Muslim semanticist Dr. "Stinky" Mahmoud, and Jubal Harshaw's three secretaries, Anne, Dorcas, and Miriam.  Numerous, yes, but not well-developed.  Very little is given as to the pasts of these or any of Heinlein's characters.

Indeed, aside from the snake handler and tattoo aficionado Patricia “Patty” Paiwonski, they are all shadows compared to the protagonist: Mike is the most rounded character given the necessity of explaining portions of his Martian upbringing.  Everyone else begins their arcs in the immediate present, and continues on from there.  I found this to be the most frustrating part of Stranger in a Strange Land (aside from the circular nature of many of the characters' interactions) for the simple fact that it doesn't give you much to grasp.  If the concept of a science fiction Mowgli-turned-philosopher type main character isn't enough to hold your interest for over 400 pages, you are somewhat out of luck, I'm afraid.

That being said, Stranger in a Strange Land's readability does significantly improve in the second half of the book.  As I mentioned earlier, Patty Paiwonski is introduced during the journeying stage of Mike's self-realization.  Not only does she grow to become an important member of Mike's Church of All Worlds but she is nearly 50 years old, covered in religious tattoos and artwork from the neck down, and described as, “associat[ing] with grifters and sinners unharmed” (271).

It is also at this point that the book really begins to dig into the complexities and issues of church-founding, culture versus religion, and the practice of Mike's teachings. Sex, God, the differences between men and women, all of this and more is played out in a far more digestible pace than in the early half of the book.

Jill Boardman's character really comes into her own as she finds liberation from social constraints with Mike's help.  Working as a showgirl while Mike is out amongst the population of America, she learns to enjoy her own body, feels the shame of voyeuristic tendencies fall away, and even takes on the role of teacher to Mike.  Through her he groks how to achieve the one thing he hasn't been able to feel – laughter.  Despite how interesting her transformation is from jealously guarding Mike to happily sharing him, her lessons at times can rub the reader in the wrong way.

For me it was hard to read about Mike's understanding of homosexuality. “ Mike would grok a “wrongness” in the poor in-betweeners anyhow – they would never be offered water” (303).  The fact that Heinlein acknowledges homosexuality is heartening.  There is very little mainstream fiction that addresses homosexuality with anything other than fear and contempt, but despite offering a kind of understanding and sympathy, it's piteous and exclusionary. T o never be offered water in the realm of Stranger means to never be offered the closeness and community that leads to ultimate happiness and physical well being.

The role of women in Mike's grokking of Earth is another point which unfolds in an intriguing but ultimately controversial way.  Jill's understanding of rape is highly repugnant.  I, for one, do not believe Jill's explanation that, “Nine times out of 10, if a girl gets raped, it's partly her fault” (304).

The strengthening of female minds and bodies is likewise seen by the handyman, Sam, as something that will cause problems for society.  “When a female conceives only as an act of volition, when she is immune to disease…and has her orientation so changed that she desires intercourse with a whole-heartedness that Cleopatra never dreamed of – but any male who tried to rape her would die so quickly, if she so grokked, that he wouldn't know what hit him?  When women are free of guilt and fear – but invulnerable?  Hell, the pharmaceutical industry will be a minor casualty – what other industries, laws, institutions, attitudes, prejudices, and nonsense must give way?” (401).

Jill's view on rape is never tested in a real case.  The societal outcome of women heartening their minds and bodies is not explored on a large scale.  In fact, precious little is.  While Stranger proposes a (somewhat) better society, it doesn't explore what such a society would look like in action outside of a small commune.

This is not to say that Stranger in a Strange Land isn't worth a read.  Though painful, dense and not altogether enjoyable, Stranger does have is noteworthy points.  The eroticism and communal living present titillating ideas.  Nevertheless, it feels claustrophobic with Heinlein's view of a conflict-less world.  In this is Heinlein's ultimate failing – there is just too little conflict in Stranger.  Society just effortlessly adapts and molds itself to Mike's teachings which, at the end of the day, all come from the philosophies of wealthy and well off people. 

To bring everything back to my earlier question of whether Heinlein was the right author to breathe new life into the story of religious awakening – Stranger in a Strange Land had the ideas, but is too verbose and simple.  Frankly, I'll stick with Heinlein for his Starship Troopers material.  He does far better when he allows himself to couch his moralizing in action adventure than when he presents unadorned explorations into the origins of cultural identity or the dissection of human nature.

Two and a half stars.  Five for originality.  One for execution.

13 thoughts on “[August 23, 1961] Lost in translation (Robert Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land)”

  1. Thank you for reviewing a book which I didn't bother more than a taste and a skip. Besides the characters – one gramaphone and the rest wallpaper – from what I remember, I disliked the idea that sex is a panacea. In this world, such a remedy would require an effort not to make women a means (however 'fufilled') rather than an end, and I gather Heinlein doesn't address the problem.  At least Thorne Smith is ttrying to be funny. Smith is trying to be funny, isn't he?

    A weakness probably minor to most readers is the lack of any human culture beside contemporary middle class US. If you consider your own culture deficient – and here Heinlein certainly seems to – surely you'd go first to one for those with shared biology? As far as I know, the only time Heinlein addresses another human culture is in Sixth Column, a Yellow Peril novel.

    Loved the tortoise news, and my best to Mabel!

    (If you feel I shouldn't review a book without reading it all, you're most welcome to delete this.)

  2. Well, I've read it, but I can't say that I really — to use the book's word — "grok" it. This may be the sort of book that reveals its depths with several rereads. It may also appeal more to younger adult readers.

    One thing I think is going on here is that Heinlein is deliberately goring a lot of sacred cows in an effort to make us think about them. I once heard him opine that true freedom comes from telling Mrs. Grundy to go fly a kite. With this book, he has handed her sticks, glue, paper, and string.

    On the other hand, there is entirely too much talking going on. Heinlein has always had a tendency to fall into lecturing and didacticism, and he does it here in spades. The book also seems to have given him fits and he had to put it aside for a while.

    As for Rosemary's criticisms of his handling of sexual matters, We should probably bear in mind that they may not represent the author's actual thoughts on the matter. Unless Jubal says it; he's clearly standing in for Heinlein. Sam may see the sexual liberation of women as problematic, but he's also fairly unenlightened at that point. His attitudes may change. Jill's rape comments are very unfortunate, but alas all too common.

    And when it comes to homosexuality, I will note that Heinlein has always had a keen nose for just how far he can push the envelope, from insisting that one of the boys in Rocketship Galileo be Jewish to accepting having to disguise the fact that Rod Walker in Tunnel in the Sky is black. He may have felt that openly accepting homosexuality was a bridge too far. Sam does become quite accepting of the kiss of peace after some rather strong opinions to the contrary.

    All in all, a difficult book. Difficult for the author to write and difficult for us to read. But worthwhile things are often difficult. I'm not yet sure this is one of them, but it might be.

  3. Did anyone else notice that the Martians are the same Martians that are in "Red Planet" ?  I guess Heinlein must have either liked them a lot or decided not to redo some world building.  (That's an inclusive or.)

  4. This is a very strange book.  I find it almost impossible to express how it made me feel.  Fascinated at times, bored at times, bewildered at times.

    Heinlein seems to be evolving from pure storyteller to philosopher, from the early stories and young adult novels to the action-packed but at times infuriating "Starship Troopers" to this novel.  I almost expect him to give up fiction entirely and just write a book full of his ideas (which often seem contradictory and difficult to pin down.)

  5. My copy came in early, but Real Life(tm) kept happening.  I much prefer being able to read a book in one or two sessions, but not only was that not possible, delays and interruptions forced me to go back to the beginning several times because I'd forgotten what was going on.

    I kept wondering if there was stuff going on that I was simply missing.  But after restarting a few times… there's no "there" there.

    Heinlein books generally have well-developed characters and tight plotting.  This book has mostly cardboard cutouts moving about aimlessly.  And I don't know if the end was supposed to be some kind of dramatic statement, but it felt like it was something from an entirely different book.

    It's Heinlein, it's huge, and it looks like the publishers are promoting it heavily; I have no doubt it will be hailed as a "classic."  But it was the first time I read a Heinlein book where I felt I had wasted my time.

    Heinlein has been quoted as saying he wanted to do "serious" science fiction.  I hope this isn't the type of writing he intends to do from now on.

      1. I'm edging back into the swing of things.  My wife will be glad when I reduce the piles of mail to something manageable…

  6. Well, having read the book many times, the first time over 40 years ago, I have a somewhat different perspective.
    1) Heinlein did develop his main character(s) quite well. The social system he was describing/postulating IS the main character. The rest, to one degree or another, are foils.
    2) L. Ron Hubbard. Look it up, do your research. His book(s) of the same period was his positing a social/religious construct. His, however was "built". Hubbard & Heinlein had discussions and these books were the outcome.
    3) There are many answers to THE questions. Only ourselves constrain them to be "only one right and the rest wrong" . Another glimpse of this is developed in Time Enough For Love.

    I fear much of what he was saying will be lost on the later generations. They are too distant from the formative conflicts in life that were happening then to have a frame of reference to hang the ideas on (i.e. WW2, Cold War, MAD, the awakening of space flight, a world that still contained some semblence of hope for the future – not the navel gazing, self-absorbed, masturbatory drive for immediate-or-sooner self-gratification of current society).

    1. Chris, point in case to help prove your insights; her entire book report – the writing style shows that she is in the millennial generation; some of these pieces of Science Fiction from that era are lost to that era of readers when it comes to the transliteration of ideas.  I too easily read Stranger in a Strangeland, enjoyed it and grasped its meanings.  However, it doesn't mean later generations will receive the information like it was intended to be presented. 

      What this does mean is that new fiction, with these same universal ideas, needs to be rewritten for Ms. Benton's generations so they can enjoy it. 

      While I'm a little dismayed (however), but delighted – she brings up some good points.  The fact that she attempted it is amazing.  Grateful this wasn't a report on Finnegans Wake or Prometheus Unchained – if Heinlein's round-about style seems unobtainable – Joyce will be astronomically cosmically removed (she and Mabel would be well advised to install an indoor circular footpath at that point). 

      Still, what the later generations are not being taught by TPTB is that literature is more of a device in many cases for transmitting information.  Stranger in a Strange Land is the layer of crypto Heinlein used to pass on his ideas.  Sadly, like alot of crypto information, it doesn't translate well when one doesn't have the keys to seeing what it really means.

      Stranger in a Strange Land is an esoteric piece of literature designed to express ideas that were often suppressed – this isn't meant to be read in the way that parallels that of other literature.  For not demarcating this position, Heinlein can be at fault repeatedly through his writing career.  Still, given the censors, he had little choice.

      Lovecraft is a prime example of how much Ms. Benton's generation would love to 'grok' most of this old school, occult literature – but can't because they lack the experience in understanding how occult literature is composed or because of some social foibles which now make such men 'unacceptable'.

      Still, I'm fairly happy to see this article, hoping she was able to obtain the uncensored version.

      1. Hello, John.  Thank you for your comments.  I'd be interested in knowing:

        1) What you feel Heinlein was trying to convey with his book; and,

        2) What contextual keys Ms. Benton be missing such that she was unable to receive Heinlein's intended communication.

        Thank you!

  7. "not the navel gazing, self-absorbed, masturbatory drive for immediate-or-sooner self-gratification of current society"

    You haven't read the Chicago Tribune lately, have you?  Every issue has a cartoon lambasting Jack for spending a dime on the New Frontier.  Heck, conservatives are even lambasting his tax cuts

    Every generation dreams.  And every generation has narrow-minded people.

  8. Personally, I believe that Sam is not complaining when he asks:

    "What happens to that industry—and to the shrill threats of moralists—when a female conceives only as an act of volition, when she is immune to disease, cares only for the approval of her own sort… and has her orientation so changed that she desires intercourse with a whole heartedness that Cleopatra never dreamed of—but any male who tried to rape her would die so quickly, if she so grokked, that he wouldn't know what hit him?"

    I believe he's just merely stating the big changes that will take place, which he says will require people to leave behind their prejudice and adapt in order to transcend. He couldn't care less for the fate of the pharmaceutical industry, which he himself describes as a minor casualty. Finally, Sam says that all of these changes will strengthen the concept of marriage, which ultimately, is one of Mike's fundamental purposes.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *