Whoever — or whatever — obviously never intended to let Alex get back home to Kansas.
It all began with that firewalking gig in Polynesia. After negotiating the bed of hot coals with only a small blister, he suddenly found the world changed around him. Instead of being Alexander Hergensheimer, minister of a fundamentalist church, he was now supposed to be Alec Graham, carrying underworld money and in the middle of an affair with the charming stewardess, Margrethe — the only good thing about the whole business.
Then there was the impossible iceberg that struck the ship and dumped Alex and Margrethe naked into the sea, to be rescued by a Royal Mexican Coast Guard plane. The next change took a double earthquake. And after that, as change followed impossible change, things went from bad to worse. Alex found it impossible even to buy Margrethe the hot fudge sundae that …
Whoever — or whatever — obviously never intended to let Alex get back home to Kansas.
It all began with that firewalking gig in Polynesia. After negotiating the bed of hot coals with only a small blister, he suddenly found the world changed around him. Instead of being Alexander Hergensheimer, minister of a fundamentalist church, he was now supposed to be Alec Graham, carrying underworld money and in the middle of an affair with the charming stewardess, Margrethe — the only good thing about the whole business.
Then there was the impossible iceberg that struck the ship and dumped Alex and Margrethe naked into the sea, to be rescued by a Royal Mexican Coast Guard plane. The next change took a double earthquake. And after that, as change followed impossible change, things went from bad to worse. Alex found it impossible even to buy Margrethe the hot fudge sundae that he had promised her.
Whatever the change, however, Alex found one constant — all the signs pointed to Armageddon and the Day of Judgment. And Margrethe wasn't even a Christian — perversely, she believed in Odin and Ragnarok. Somehow, he had to bring her to a state of grace. Without her, Heaven would be no paradise to him.
Somewhere, he felt, there had to be an answer to his problem and to the question of why he was being persecuted. And, of course, there was.
Review of 'Job: A Comedy of Justice' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
This is, perhaps, Heinlein at his best. The first 50 pp or so are a little slow, but it picks up after that. As the main character shifts from reality to reality, Heinlein embarks on the moral, a person must have faith. Faith in a specific deity or religion is not important, faith in something more than ourselves is all that matters. While it is a somewhat simple message, the amazing tale that Heinlein weaves and the excellent characters he creates make this novel more than worth the read. This is a must-read.