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do you play games where you know the outcome of the game itself is without question... where any fun to be had is not so much in the winning - that's predetermined - but in figuring out how exactly you will win, what moves you will make, how you will overcome all those minor hurdles along the way? that's sometimes how i feel when playing chess with some folks. for me, it's not the most exciting thing in the world; it's a little eye-rolling. i think others may have more excitement when playing a
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I’ve read The Moon is a Harsh Mistress twice in twenty years. Two decades between readings and it still holds up surprisingly well. Heinlein’s Lunar Revolution, his benevolent AI, Mycroft (aka Mike), and Professor de la Paz’s ideas for government were all exactly how I remembered them. Yet I found that my favourite part of the rereading experience was the tale it told about me.
When I read this book the first time, I was an idealistic youth who believed that change was possible and worth fightin ...more
When I read this book the first time, I was an idealistic youth who believed that change was possible and worth fightin ...more

Moon is used as a penal colony. Generations of "Loonies" have grown up knowing nothing but minimal gravity, rigid social conventions, and the grasping Lunar Authority. The Loonies are tired of being Earth's grain producers without receiving appropriate recompence, but have no political power or weapons. Luckily for them, computerman Mannie teams up with the first AI, Mike, an old professor, and a professional revolutionary from the Hong Kong colony, the beautiful Wyoh. Together (although not rea
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This is your anarchist's revolutionary handbook. If you're being oppressed by imperialist overlords that treat you little better than slaves and you want to organise a revolt to liberate yourselves, this is an ideal guide to doing everything from setting up an effective underground communications network, how to know when (and what) to strike, when (and how) to netogiate with your oppressors and how to win a war when outnumbered and against a better equipped and supplied enemy. Of course, it hel
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This here is my favorite book. I suppose The Road meant more to me, but when I'm taking my entrance test for heaven, and they ask me what my favorite book was and why, I'll say this one. And it'll be because of the amazing world Heinlein created, and the amazing characters he had populate it, and the ideas, which aren't always new -- in fact, certain of them are awfully old, and crusty from disuse -- those characters have, and the story, oh!, the amazing story of the liberation of the moon. I ha
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3.5 stars. Too often it read like Heinlein's how-to book on launching a libertarian revolution, which is fine and all, except I would have liked some more actual plot.
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One of my favorite books. I think back to it constantly and I want more. I'm reading other Heinlein books but nothing has come close so far.
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Mar 03, 2009
This Is Not The Michael You're Looking For
marked it as to-read


Jan 08, 2010
Danielle The Book Huntress
marked it as to-read

Mar 09, 2010
Eric
marked it as to-read

Jun 18, 2010
Carolyn
marked it as browse-to-read-someday


Nov 01, 2013
Terry
marked it as to-read