"SUITABLE FOR RUGGED LIFE FORMS SUCH AS LICHENS AND MEN": FIRST EDITION OF HEINLEIN'S RED PLANET
HEINLEIN, Robert. Red Planet. A Colonial Boy on Mars. Illustrated by Clifford Geary. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1949. Octavo, original black cloth, pictorial endpapers, original dust jacket.
First edition of Heinlein's third "boy's book," a fast-paced, fully realized tale of revolution on a Martian colony.
With Red Planet, "which recounts the adventures of two young colonists and their Martian 'pet,' Heinlein came fully into his own as a writer of science fiction for teenagers. A strong narrative line, carefully worked-out technical detail, realistic characters and brisk dialogue are the leading virtues of this and most of his later juveniles" (Clute & Nicholls, 555). Heinlein's editor Alice Dalgliesh objected to what she considered some of the book's subtly suggestive details—the "strangely shaped aliens," the teenagers' use of weapons, even mention of a bathroom—and censored Heinlein's text so heavily that he "thought about publishing only under his 'Lyle Monroe' pseudonym and even asked to have the editor's name substituted for his or added as co-writer" (William H. Patterson, Jr.). (A restored text finally saw print in 1991.) Even so, Red Planet quickly became one of Heinlein's most popular adventures. It also plants seeds (including the nature of the Martian elders and the Martians' emphasis on personal liberty) the author would fully cultivate in his counter-cultural classic, Stranger in a Strange Land (1961). Percival Lowell's maps of Mars appear on the endpapers, used with permission from the Lowell Observatory. First printing, with Scribner "A" on copyright page. Currey, 192. Smiley, 32.
Book fine, dust jacket with mild toning to spine and short closed tear to front panel, bright, clean, and near-fine. A lovely copy of this scarce early Heinlein title.