The Notebooks Of Lazarus Long, Putnam, 1978. (Taken from two chapters of Time Enough For Love).
The Number Of The Beast, Fawcett Columbine, 1980. Reprinted by Ace Books.
Expanded Universe, Ace Books, 1980. Reprinted by Ace Books.
“A Bathroom of Her Own,” Expanded Universe, 1980. Reprinted by Ace Books.
“On the Slopes of Vesuvius,” Expanded Universe, 1980. Reprinted by Ace Books.
Friday, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1982. Reprinted by Del Rey Books.
Job: A Comedy Of Justice, Del Rey Books, 1984. Reprinted by Del Rey Books.
The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, Putnam, 1985. Reprinted by Ace Books.
To Sail Beyond The Sunset, Putnam, 1987. Reprinted by Ace Books.
MISCELLANEOUS
(These two items defy classification.)
Tomorrow, The Stars, Doubleday, 1952. This is an anthology, which was put together by someone else, and Robert wrote the preface for it.
Destination Moon, Gregg Press, 1979, edited by David G. Hartwell. The title page says it is by Robert A. Heinlein, with a new introduction by David G. Hartwell. This book contains a novelette titled “Destination Moon,” and an article called “Shooting Destination Moon,” which originally appeared in Astounding Science Fiction, July 1950. It also contains a number of still pictures from DM, and photocopies of many newspaper and magazine clippings.
NONFICTION
“Discovery of the Future,” Guest of Honor speech at Denver, Colorado, 1941 World Science Fiction Convention. Printed in Vertex, issue if I.
“Man in the Moon” (“Back of the Moon”), Elks Magazine, 1947.
“Flight Into the Future,” Collier’s, August 30, 1947.
“On the Writing of Science Fiction,” published in Of Worlds Beyond, Fantasy Press, 1947,
“Baedecker of the Solar System,” The Saturday Review of Literature, December 24, 1949. Review of Bonestell and Ley’s book, Conquest of Space.
“Where To?” article, Galaxy, February 1952.
“Shooting Destination Moon,” Astounding Science Fiction, July 1950.
Article about writing, Writer’s Digest, March, 1950.
“This I Believe,” radio article written for Edward R. Murrow series of the same title. [Broadcast December 1, 1952]
“Ray Guns and Rocket Ships,” published by the Bulletin of the School Library Association of California, 1952.
“The Third Millennium Opens,” Amazing Stories, April 1956.
“Science Fiction: Its Nature, Faults and Virtues,” Advent Publishers, 1959.
“Who Are the Heirs of Patrick Henry?,” published April 12, 1958, Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph. Also in Expanded Universe.
” ‘Pravda’ Means ‘Truth’,” American Mercury, October 1960.
“Inside Intourist,” published in Expanded Universe.
“Appointment in Space,” Popular Mechanics, 1963.
“The Happy Road to Science Fiction,” McClurg’s Book News, 1964.
“Science Fiction: The World of ‘What If?’,” World Book, 1964.
Foreword for Beyond Jupiter, by Chesley Bonestell and Arthur C. Clarke, Viking Press, 1972.
Forrestal Lecture, 1973, published in Analog, January 1974.
“A United States Citizen Thinks About Canada,” Canada and the World, April 1975.
“Dirac, Antimatter and You,” Compton Yearbook, 1975.
“Are You a Rare Blood?” Compton Yearbook, 1976.
Testimony before joint session, House Committee on Aging and House Committee on Science and Technology, August 19, 1979, published in Expanded Universe, 1980, as “Spinoff.”
“Larger Than Life,” written for MosCon I, published in Expanded Universe, 1980.
Preface for Ted Sturgeon novel, Godbody, Donald I. Fine, 1985.
About the Author
Robert Anson Heinlein was born in Butler, Missouri, in 1907. A graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, he was retired, disabled, in 1934. He studied mathematics and physics at the graduate school of the University of California and owned a silver mine before beginning to write science fiction in 1939. In 1947 his first book of fiction, Rocket Ship Galileo, was published. His novels include Double Star (1956), Starship Troopers (1959), Stranger In a Strange Land (1961), and The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (1966), all winners of the Hugo Award. Heinlein was guest commentator for the Apollo 11 first lunar landing. In 1975 he received the Grand Master Nebula Award for lifetime achievement. Mr. Heinlein died in 1988.