I Will Fear No Evil by
Robert A. Heinlein
My rating:
4 of 5 stars
For what is VERY much a novel of its time, 1970, with free love, challenging normal family relationships, being accepting of all kinds of LGBTQ setups, or even freedom for age limitations (December/May relationships), it's a book that really ought to feel right at home with modern audiences.
Indeed, for a good 3/4 of the novel, it really would be. Just get beyond the first quarter of the novel and fly right into the whole SF true sex change (old man's brain in a young woman's body, trying to deal with social/sexual situations), and it pretty much flies. It's fun, free love, sex, and especially love, love, love transcending all boundaries. And I don't mean true love or monogamous love, but freedom to love.
It's a wild ride just so long as you place the novel in exactly its right place and time.
But in modern time? LOOOOL. I almost quit it over the opening sequences of the dirty old men oggling the young woman who, even though she was perfectly happy with it all, still felt... ugly and dirty because so many modern examples shows it to BE ugly and dirty. But this IS a character novel and taking it all on the cases presented here, it's actually rather sweet and accepting and it becomes a clever and honestly interesting take and condemnation of closed-mindedness all across the board.
Trans politics through the easy SF lens? Yep. All sexual politics m/f f/f m/m and everything else inbetween, challenging critics and readers through that easy SF lens? Absolutely. It's bold and fearless.
There's a LOT to love about this novel. It's also easy to condemn for the sheer creepiness of a few aspects.
Would I recommend this to anyone without this caveat? No. But with it? It's honestly worthwhile. Just problematic. :)
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