Cover of Shasta edition collection The Man Who Sold the Moon is a science fiction novella by Robert A. Heinlein written in 1949 and first published on February 23,1951, part of his "Future History" of stories sharing a common background from "Life-Line" to "Da Capo". This story, which has the sequel "Requiem", covered events around a fictional first moon-landing, in 1978. It follows the story "Blowups Happen" in the Future History chronology. In that story, space flight was supposedly assured by a new nuclear fuel produced in an orbiting reactor. In this episode the reactor has been destroyed and the nuclear rocket has been found to be a dead-end. Image File history File links The_Man_Who_Sold_the_Moon_Shasta_Ed. ...
Image File history File links The_Man_Who_Sold_the_Moon_Shasta_Ed. ...
Science fiction is a form of speculative fiction principally dealing with the impact of imagined science and technology, or both, upon society and persons as individuals. ...
A novella is a short novel; a narrative work of prose fiction somewhat longer than a short story but shorter than a novel. ...
This article is becoming very long. ...
1949 (MCMXLIX) was a common year starting on Saturday (the link is to a full 1949 calendar). ...
1951 (MCMLI) was a common year starting on Monday; see its calendar. ...
A future history is a postulated history of the future that some science fiction authors construct as a common background for fiction. ...
Life-Line is Heinleins first published science fiction story, about a man who builds a machine that will predict how long a person will live. ...
Requiem is a short story by Robert A. Heinlein, serving as a sequel to his short science fiction novel, The Man Who Sold the Moon. ...
1978 (MCMLXXVIII) was a common year starting on Sunday. ...
Blowups Happen is a science fiction short story by Robert A. Heinlein. ...
The Man Who Sold the Moon follows the machinations of Delos D. Harriman, "the first of the new robber barons," who is determined to reach and control the Moon. The story centers on Harriman's wheelings and dealings to accomplish his dream. "I," he tells his business partner, "would cheat, lie, steal, beg, bribe — do anything to accomplish what we have accomplished". Harriman's determination is rooted in his childhood desire to travel to the moon himself, but the responsibilities of running his lunar empire may make this dream impossible. Delos David Harriman is a character in the fiction of noted science fiction author Robert A. Heinlein. ...
John D. Rockefeller Sr. ...
Plot
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. - You've got to be a believer!
One of the best opening lines in popular literature sends us headlong into Harriman's obsession. He is trying to persuade his long-time partner George Strong, who is also a mathematical and financial genius, to join him in his quest. The obstacles are daunting. The promise of nuclear fuel for rockets has evaporated, the fuel shortages of the recent war are hanging on thanks to government inertia, his financial associates are dismissive of his visions. One contemptuously offers to sell his "entire interest in the Moon for fifty cents", whereupon Harriman calls his bluff and tries to buy all the other associates' interests as well. Harriman tackles his problems in stages. He knows the technical problems are solvable, given the right talent. The financial problems are tougher. He resorts to exploiting rivalries between commercial and political entities. He bluffs that he has been offered a large sum to turn the Moon into a massive billboard using a rocket which scatters black dust on the surface in patterns [1]. To the owner of the "Moka-Cola" company he implies that the culprit is the rival soft drink maker "6+". To a fervent anti-Communist, he suggests that the Russians may be capable of printing the hammer and sickle across the face of the Moon if they get a lead in rocket technology. The symbol as it appeared on the Soviet flag The hammer and sickle as it appears on Communist Party of China flag since 1917. ...
Harriman also has to tackle political problems. If getting to the Moon becomes an international political issue, it will sap his resources and leave him open to espionage and sabotage. He also aims to keep the Moon out of government ownership, something that will be impossible if he claims it on behalf of the United States[2]. Noting that the Moon passes directly overhead only in a narrow band north and south of the equator, he looks to common law which holds that property rights extend to infinity above a land parcel. On that basis, Mexico, Central and parts of South America, and corresponding countries in those latitudes around the world, have a claim on the Moon. The USA also has a claim, thanks to Florida and Texas extending into the band[3]. Starting a campaign around the world for countries to assert their rights in this matter, he engineers a compromise whereby the United Nations will manage the Moon, through one of its chartered corporations. Needless to say, Harriman owns the corporation. This article concerns the common-law legal system, as contrasted with the civil law legal system; for other meanings of the term, within the field of law, see common law (disambiguation). ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Official language(s) None See: Languages of Texas Capital Austin Largest city Houston Area Ranked 2nd - Total 268,581 sq mi (695,622 km²) - Width 773 miles (1,244 km) - Length 790 miles (1,270 km) - % water 2. ...
The United Nations (UN) is an international organization whose stated aims are to facilitate co-operation in international law, international security, economic development, and social equity. ...
Money, however, is the main concern. He sells everything he can, raises money from widows, orphans, and readers of comic books, and basically harnesses every huckstering scheme he knows. Children raise money in classrooms. Promises are made to have all contributors' names engraved on a plaque to be left on the Moon. The writing, however, will have to be microscopic in size. He has the rocket designated as an official US Post Office, hoping to sell canceled stamps from the Moon to collectors. He plants stories that there are diamonds in moondust, intending to secretly place diamonds in the rocket to convince people that the stories are true. He will strenuously deny that the diamonds are from the Moon, being merely part of a scientific experiment, so he will not be guilty of actual fraud. A comic book is a magazine or book containing the art form of comics. ...
One thing eludes him. He wants to be on the first rocket himself, but there is only room for a pilot, and a small one at that. Harriman convinces himself he will be on the second ship. The first rocket takes off to great fanfare. It is launched from Peterson Field, near Colorado Springs, and the discarded rocket stages have to be carefully tracked as they parachute down in the Midwest. A cow in Kansas comes to a premature end. Peterson Air Force Base (Peterson AFB) is a base of the United States Air Force located in El Paso County, Colorado near Colorado Springs. ...
Colorado Springs is a middle-sized city, located just east of the geographic center of the state of Colorado in the United States. ...
The Midwest is a common name for a region of the United States of America. ...
Contact with home is limited during the flight. The ship eventually returns and lands in the USA. Harriman has to be the first to open the hatch, as the bag of mail had been left behind to save weight, and he needs to surreptitiously get it aboard. While doing so, he asks the pilot if he can have the hidden diamonds. The pilot complies, and then produces real lunar diamonds as well. As Harriman predicted, once the first flight is made, money gravitates towards his venture to finance more flights using a catapult launcher built on Pikes Peak. The next flight will take a colonization team. He is determined to be on the team, but then his business associates drop their bombshell. One has quietly bought a controlling stake in the corporation and he prevents Harriman from going, claiming that he is too important to the corporation. A mass driver for lunar launch (artists conception) A mass driver or electromagnetic catapult is a method of spacecraft propulsion that would use a linear motor to accelerate payloads up to high speeds. ...
Pikes Peak (formerly Pikes Peak, see below) is a mountain in the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains, 10 miles (16 km) west of Colorado Springs, Colorado, in El Paso County. ...
Harriman is devastated. The rocket leaves without him. He is another Moses, who led his people to the land he himself was forbidden to enter. Moses strikes water from the stone, by Bacchiacca Moses (Hebrew: ×ֹשֶ××, Standard Tiberian ; Arabic: Ù
ÙØ³Ù, ; Geez: áá´ Musse) was an early Biblical Hebrew religious leader, lawgiver, prophet, and historian. ...
Spoilers end here. Related works The Man Who Sold the Moon is also the title of two books of short stories. The second one also included Heinlein's stories: "Let There Be Light", "The Roads Must Roll", and "Requiem". The first one had included those stories plus "Life-Line" and "Blowups Happen". The Man Who Sold the Moon was the title of two anthologies of science fiction short stories by Robert A. Heinlein. ...
âLet There Be Lightâ a science fiction short story by Robert A. Heinlein, originally published in Super Science Stories magazine in May 1940 under the pseudonym Lyle Monroe. ...
The Roads Must Roll is a 1940 science fiction short story by Robert A. Heinlein about wide, rapidly moving passenger platforms (like moving sidewalks, but much faster). ...
Requiem is a short story by Robert A. Heinlein, serving as a sequel to his short science fiction novel, The Man Who Sold the Moon. ...
Life-Line is Heinleins first published science fiction story, about a man who builds a machine that will predict how long a person will live. ...
Blowups Happen is a science fiction short story by Robert A. Heinlein. ...
Although the science fiction film Destination Moon is generally described as being based on Heinlein's novel Rocket Ship Galileo, the story in fact bears a much closer resemblance to "The Man Who Sold the Moon", whose copyright date shows that it was written in 1949, although it wasn't published until 1951, the year after Destination Moon came out. However, the technology of The Man Who Sold the Moon is very different, in that it uses a multi-stage rocket. Destination Moon has a single-stage vehicle which takes off and lands vertically both on Earth and the Moon, which is practically impossible using chemical fuels alone (Though dialog in the movie makes it very clear that the spacecraft is, in fact, nuclear powered). Categories: Movie stubs | 1950 films | Science fiction films ...
Rocket Ship Galileo is a science fiction novel by Robert Heinlein in which boys build a rocket ship in their backyard and take it to the moon. ...
Influence on other Heinlein works The character of Harriman appeared "Requiem", which picks up years later with Harriman as old man who has still not been able to go to the moon. However that story was published in 1940, several years prior to the publication of its "prequel". Requiem is a short story by Robert A. Heinlein, serving as a sequel to his short science fiction novel, The Man Who Sold the Moon. ...
The name "Harriman" continues to appear in many of Heinlein's Future History stories as the name of various businesses and foundations, indicating that Harriman's impact on that timeline is significant. A future history is a postulated history of the future that some science fiction authors construct as a common background for fiction. ...
See also David Bowie (born David Robert Jones on January 8, 1947) is an English singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, producer, arranger and audio engineer whose work spans more than four decades. ...
1970 (MCMLXX) was a common year starting on Thursday (the link is to a full 1970 calendar). ...
The Man Who Sold the World is an album by David Bowie. ...
Notes and references - ^ Since the Moon is actually a dark gray color, similar to worn blacktop, a brilliant white dust such as titanium dioxide would actually be more effective.
- ^ In reality the Moon was held to be common property of humanity before the first moon landing.
- ^ Hawaii, considerably closer to the equator than either Florida or Texas, was not a state at the time of writing
A Blacktop is a reference to surfaced roads in areas of the world where such infrastructure development is a luxury in comparison to the local standard of Graded road. ...
Titanium dioxide, also known as titanium(IV) oxide or titania, is the naturally occurring oxide of titanium, chemical formula TiO2. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
External link The Man Who Sold the Moon publication history at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database The Internet Speculative Fiction Database is a database of bibliographic information on science fiction and related genres such as fantasy fiction and horror fiction. ...
| v • d • e Robert A. Heinlein's Future History | | Collections | The Past Through Tomorrow, Orphans of the Sky | | Short Stories | Life-Line, "Let There Be Light", The Roads Must Roll, Blowups Happen, The Man Who Sold the Moon, Delilah and the Space Rigger, Space Jockey, Requiem, The Long Watch, Gentlemen, Be Seated!, The Black Pits of Luna, "It's Great to Be Back!", "—We Also Walk Dogs", Searchlight, Ordeal in Space, The Green Hills of Earth, Logic of Empire, The Menace from Earth, "If This Goes On—", Coventry, Misfit, Universe, Common Sense | | Novels | Methuselah's Children, Time Enough for Love, To Sail Beyond the Sunset | |