Time Enough for Love

Front Cover
Penguin, Aug 15, 1987 - Fiction - 608 pages
The capstone and crowning achievement of  the Future History series, from the New York Times bestselling Grand Master of Science Fiction...

Time Enough for Love follows Lazarus Long through a vast and magnificent timescape of centuries and worlds. Heinlein's longest and most ambitious work, it is the story of a man so in love with Life that he refused to stop living it; and so in love with Time that he became his own ancestor.
 

Selected pages

Contents

PRELUDE
1
COUNTERPOINT
37
VARIATIONS ON A THEME
48
The Tale of the Man Who Was Too Lazy to Fail
55
Domestic Problems
81
COUNTERPOINT
121
COUNTERPOINT
144
VARIATIONS ON A THEME
156
INTERMISSION
249
VARIATIONS ON A THEME
260
SECOND INTERMISSION
359
VARIATIONS ON A THEME
367
Narcissus
450
DA CAPO
467
539
522
Copyright

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About the author (1987)

Robert Anson Heinlein was born in Missouri in 1907, and was raised there. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1929, but was forced by illness to retire from the Navy in 1934. He settled in California and over the next five years held a variety of jobs while doing post-graduate work in mathematics and physics at the University of California. In 1939 he sold his first science fiction story to Astounding magazine and soon devoted himself to the genre.

He was a four-time winner of the Hugo Award for his novels Stranger in a Strange Land (1961), Starship Troopers (1959), Double Star (1956), and The Moon is a Harsh Mistress (1966). His Future History series, incorporating both short stories and novels, was first mapped out in 1941. The series charts the social, political, and technological changes shaping human society from the present through several centuries into the future.

Robert A. Heinlein's books were among the first works of science fiction to reach bestseller status in both hardcover and paperback. He continued to work into his eighties, and his work never ceased to amaze, to entertain, and to generate controversy. By the time hed died, in 1988, it was evident that he was one of the formative talents of science fiction: a writer whose unique vision, unflagging energy, and persistence, over the course of five decades, made a great impact on the American mind.

 

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