Friday (novel)

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Title Friday

First Edition cover of Friday
Author Robert A. Heinlein
Cover artist Richard Powers
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Science fiction novel
Publisher Holt, Rinehart and Winston
Released April 1982
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
ISBN ISBN 0-03-061516-X (first edition, hardback)

Friday is a 1982 science fiction novel by Robert A. Heinlein. It is the story of a female "artificial person", the character of the title, genetically engineered to be stronger, faster, smarter, and generally better than normal humans. Artificial humans are widely resented, and much of the story deals with Friday's struggle both against prejudice and to conceal her attributes from other humans. The story occurs against a backdrop of general social collapse, widely thought to represent the theorized decline of Western Civilization.

Friday was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1982 Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1983.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The book deals with Friday, an artificial person superior in many ways to an ordinary human, but subject to great prejudice when she is discovered. Employed as a courier who can really care for herself in a Balkanized world, she is forced to journey all over North America when she is caught up in civil disturbances. She reaches safety, but is soon displaced by her boss's death. Sent on a space journey as a courier, she realizes that the journey is likely to end with her death, and evades the ship's authorities to settle on a pioneer world with some friends.

[edit] Allusions/references to actual history, geography and current science

Heinlein clearly extrapolates trends which unfurl around us today. For example, he predicts ubiquitous personal wireless telephony and an Internet complete with multimedia and search engines long before they existed. He describes a leviathan called Shipstone, Inc., an indispensable and manipulative megacorporation. He speaks of a world tendency for large states to splinter into many smaller ones a full decade before the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Heinlein also plays on the darker undercurrents threatening mankind, among them organized crime, pestilence and famine, and various forms of know-nothingism, religious terrorism included.

[edit] Allusions/references to other works

Friday is loosely tied to the novelette "Gulf", which appeared in Assignment in Eternity, since both works share characters — "Kettle Belly" Baldwin and "Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Green". (The latter two do not appear in Friday, but are mentioned as two of the title character's genetic progenitors.) The motif of a secret superman society in the latter work, however, is not mentioned in Friday, where the heroine is an artificial person, and is not part of a secret society (the principal reason to be secret about her artificialness is to avoid discrimination). However, at his death, Baldwin leaves Friday a subsidy to finance her emigration to any planet of her choice, except Olympia, where the "supermen" went at some indeterminate point in the past.

The Shipstone, the extra-solar colonies Fiddler's Green, Proxima and Botany Bay, and the start of the balkanization of North America are mentioned in The Cat Who Walks Through Walls.

[edit] Trivia

  • Although the character explicitly states in the novel that she is dark-skinned, all covers for this book have shown a caucasian woman.

[edit] External links


Robert A. Heinlein Novels, Major Short-story Collections, and Nonfiction (Bibliography) Robert A. Heinlein at the 1976 World Science Fiction Convention

Future History and World as Myth: Methuselah's Children (1958) | The Past Through Tomorrow (1967) | Time Enough for Love (1973) | The Number of the Beast (1980) | The Cat Who Walks Through Walls (1985) | To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987)

Scribner's juveniles: Rocket Ship Galileo (1947) | Space Cadet (1948) | Red Planet (1949) | Farmer in the Sky (1950) | Between Planets (1951) | The Rolling Stones (1952) | Starman Jones (1953) | The Star Beast (1954) | Tunnel in the Sky (1955) | Time for the Stars (1956) | Citizen of the Galaxy (1957) | Have Space Suit—Will Travel (1958)

Other fiction: For Us, The Living: A Comedy of Customs (1939/2003) | Beyond This Horizon (1942) | Sixth Column (also known as The Day After Tomorrow) (1949) | The Puppet Masters (1951) | Double Star (1956) | The Door into Summer (1957) | Starship Troopers (1959) | Stranger in a Strange Land (1961) | Podkayne of Mars (1963) | Glory Road (1963) | Farnham's Freehold (1965) | The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (1966) | I Will Fear No Evil (1970) | Friday (1982) | Job: A Comedy of Justice (1984) | Variable Star (1955/2006)

Nonfiction: Take Back Your Government! (1946/1992) | Tramp Royale (1954/1992) | Expanded Universe (1980) | Grumbles from the Grave (1989)

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