mass market paperback
English language
Published July 8, 1975 by Berkley.
Robert A. Heinlein: The Past through Tomorrow (Future History Series) (Paperback, 1975, Berkley)
mass market paperback
English language
Published July 8, 1975 by Berkley.
This connected series of stories does not pretend to be prophetic. It is a history, not of the future, but of a future -- an alternate-probability world which is logically self-consistent, dramatic, and recognizably an offshoot of our own past. The stories really do not form a linear series at all -- they are more like a pyramid, in which ealier stories provide a solid base for later ones to rest on. Partly because of this pyramiding of background and partly because of the author's broad knowledge, Heinlein's readers find themselves in a world which is clearly our own, only projected a few years or decades into the future. As for the still-unfolding future, there are guideposts and warnings here. Heinlein continually reminds us that history is a process, not something dead and embalmed in textbooks. - Introduction.
The Past Through Tomorrow is a collection of Robert A. Heinlein's Future …
This connected series of stories does not pretend to be prophetic. It is a history, not of the future, but of a future -- an alternate-probability world which is logically self-consistent, dramatic, and recognizably an offshoot of our own past. The stories really do not form a linear series at all -- they are more like a pyramid, in which ealier stories provide a solid base for later ones to rest on. Partly because of this pyramiding of background and partly because of the author's broad knowledge, Heinlein's readers find themselves in a world which is clearly our own, only projected a few years or decades into the future. As for the still-unfolding future, there are guideposts and warnings here. Heinlein continually reminds us that history is a process, not something dead and embalmed in textbooks. - Introduction.
The Past Through Tomorrow is a collection of Robert A. Heinlein's Future History stories. Most of the stories are part of a larger storyline of a rapidly collapsing American sanity, followed by a theocratic dictatorship. A revolution overthrows the theocracy and establishes a free society which, nonetheless, does not save the pseudo-immortal Lazarus Long and his Howard Families from fleeing Earth for their lives. - Wikipedia.