supergee: (grandpa)
Arthur D. Hlavaty ([personal profile] supergee) wrote2014-05-11 11:58 am

Generational

Old guy who had his life changed by reading Stranger in a Stranger Land points you at [livejournal.com profile] matociquala's discussion of why kids nowadays don't do that and it's OK. It's OK with me too.
thistleingrey: (Default)

[personal profile] thistleingrey 2014-05-11 10:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree with that post. I'm 3-5 years younger than matociquala is (based on the high-school arithmetic problem included there). Stranger and a few other SF novels were on my high school's recommended list, but I'd met Heinlein's work already at the local library. (And I was one of probably a handful of kids in nearly 500 who actually read any of the recommended summer reading.) But when I taught college-level English comp more than ten years ago, I skipped Heinlein for Delany, Willis, Sturgeon, Butler, and Chiang (different semesters) because I couldn't figure out how I would teach a Heinlein novel without supplying a bunch of half-apologetic context to help his work make sense to the students. I mentioned him, Clarke, and others in class, in case of that one student who does outside reading by their own preference....
Edited (two blurs clarified--sorry) 2014-05-11 22:26 (UTC)
micheinnz: (resistance)

[personal profile] micheinnz 2014-05-12 06:12 am (UTC)(link)
My sixteen-year-old daughter is reading it as part of her studies for Year 12 (junior year?) English.

I has a proud.