Wikipedia:Today's featured article/July 20, 2005

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Heinlein at the 1976 Worldcon

Robert Heinlein was one of the most influential and controversial authors in the science fiction genre. He became the first science fiction writer to break into major general magazines in the late 1940s with true, undisguised science fiction, and the first bestselling novel-length science fiction in the 1960s. For many years he, Isaac Asimov, and Arthur C. Clarke were known as the Big Three of science fiction. The major themes of Heinlein's work were social: radical individualism, libertarianism, religion, the relationship between physical and emotional love, and speculation about unorthodox family relationships. His iconoclastic beliefs have led to wildly divergent perceptions of him. The novel Stranger in a Strange Land put him in the unexpected role of Pied Piper of the sexual revolution and 1960s counterculture, but he has also been cast as a fascist, based on the contemporaneous Starship Troopers.

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