Heinlein story regarding suspended animation and reading newspapers?Story about colony ships in suspended...

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Heinlein story regarding suspended animation and reading newspapers?


Story about colony ships in suspended animation overtaken by newer, faster shipsfantasy book/trilogy where magic-using character has swarm of bees as a familiarstory id - werewolf biochemist vs alien invasionComing of age short story with a boy at a summer place with his parents, implication of time travelersSpace-based scifi probably on KindleTrying to identify a short story (possibly arc) where barbarian and accomplice freed slavesShort story: Time paradox destroys universe; not Fredric Brown's “Experiment”A short story where citizen spends time deciding on how to spend his taxesShort story with a time loop initiated by aliens studying humans for one million yearsShort story in a SF anthology, TV and radio stop working so everyone fills their spare time doing painting and decorating






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In one of Heinlein’s stories, a character awakes after having been in suspended animation for many years and catches up on what he’s missed by spending a few hours reading a history book, then remarks on how much time he would have wasted had he read a newspaper every day for all that time, reading about matters too ephemeral to make the history books.










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    In one of Heinlein’s stories, a character awakes after having been in suspended animation for many years and catches up on what he’s missed by spending a few hours reading a history book, then remarks on how much time he would have wasted had he read a newspaper every day for all that time, reading about matters too ephemeral to make the history books.










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      In one of Heinlein’s stories, a character awakes after having been in suspended animation for many years and catches up on what he’s missed by spending a few hours reading a history book, then remarks on how much time he would have wasted had he read a newspaper every day for all that time, reading about matters too ephemeral to make the history books.










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      In one of Heinlein’s stories, a character awakes after having been in suspended animation for many years and catches up on what he’s missed by spending a few hours reading a history book, then remarks on how much time he would have wasted had he read a newspaper every day for all that time, reading about matters too ephemeral to make the history books.







      story-identification short-stories






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      asked 8 hours ago









      Mark HarrisonMark Harrison

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          The closest story I can find by Heinlein that matches your question is 'FOR US, THE LIVING: A Comedy of Customs' (pub.2003).



          It concern our protagonist waking up 150 years after apparently dying in a car crash. Although I cannot find a quote matching your question, the protagonist does catch up on history by means of a few history books (and one evening spent with a history professor). In fact, this catching up is the main bulk of the story (it's far from his best work).




          "Where do we start?"



          "I can’t decide what you are to do about anything, but it seems to me that the very first thing to do is to bring you up to date so that you will fit in twenty-eighty-six. It is a rather different world. You must learn a lot of new customs and a century-and-a-half of history and a number of new techniques and so forth. When you are up to date, you can decide for yourself what you want to do – and then you can do anything you want."



          "It sounds to me as if I’d be too old to want to do anything by that time."







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          Joseph Snarley is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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          • 2





            I tried to read For Us, the Living once but gave up. This question reminds me of The Door into Summer but the hero of that one spends many hours reading old newspapers.

            – user14111
            5 hours ago











          • @user14111, it is indeed a bit of a slog. It works more as an essay on how Heinlein thinks the world will progress in that timeframe than it does a work of fiction.

            – Joseph Snarley
            4 hours ago
















          Your Answer








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          The closest story I can find by Heinlein that matches your question is 'FOR US, THE LIVING: A Comedy of Customs' (pub.2003).



          It concern our protagonist waking up 150 years after apparently dying in a car crash. Although I cannot find a quote matching your question, the protagonist does catch up on history by means of a few history books (and one evening spent with a history professor). In fact, this catching up is the main bulk of the story (it's far from his best work).




          "Where do we start?"



          "I can’t decide what you are to do about anything, but it seems to me that the very first thing to do is to bring you up to date so that you will fit in twenty-eighty-six. It is a rather different world. You must learn a lot of new customs and a century-and-a-half of history and a number of new techniques and so forth. When you are up to date, you can decide for yourself what you want to do – and then you can do anything you want."



          "It sounds to me as if I’d be too old to want to do anything by that time."







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          Joseph Snarley is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.

















          • 2





            I tried to read For Us, the Living once but gave up. This question reminds me of The Door into Summer but the hero of that one spends many hours reading old newspapers.

            – user14111
            5 hours ago











          • @user14111, it is indeed a bit of a slog. It works more as an essay on how Heinlein thinks the world will progress in that timeframe than it does a work of fiction.

            – Joseph Snarley
            4 hours ago


















          4














          The closest story I can find by Heinlein that matches your question is 'FOR US, THE LIVING: A Comedy of Customs' (pub.2003).



          It concern our protagonist waking up 150 years after apparently dying in a car crash. Although I cannot find a quote matching your question, the protagonist does catch up on history by means of a few history books (and one evening spent with a history professor). In fact, this catching up is the main bulk of the story (it's far from his best work).




          "Where do we start?"



          "I can’t decide what you are to do about anything, but it seems to me that the very first thing to do is to bring you up to date so that you will fit in twenty-eighty-six. It is a rather different world. You must learn a lot of new customs and a century-and-a-half of history and a number of new techniques and so forth. When you are up to date, you can decide for yourself what you want to do – and then you can do anything you want."



          "It sounds to me as if I’d be too old to want to do anything by that time."







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          Joseph Snarley is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.

















          • 2





            I tried to read For Us, the Living once but gave up. This question reminds me of The Door into Summer but the hero of that one spends many hours reading old newspapers.

            – user14111
            5 hours ago











          • @user14111, it is indeed a bit of a slog. It works more as an essay on how Heinlein thinks the world will progress in that timeframe than it does a work of fiction.

            – Joseph Snarley
            4 hours ago
















          4












          4








          4







          The closest story I can find by Heinlein that matches your question is 'FOR US, THE LIVING: A Comedy of Customs' (pub.2003).



          It concern our protagonist waking up 150 years after apparently dying in a car crash. Although I cannot find a quote matching your question, the protagonist does catch up on history by means of a few history books (and one evening spent with a history professor). In fact, this catching up is the main bulk of the story (it's far from his best work).




          "Where do we start?"



          "I can’t decide what you are to do about anything, but it seems to me that the very first thing to do is to bring you up to date so that you will fit in twenty-eighty-six. It is a rather different world. You must learn a lot of new customs and a century-and-a-half of history and a number of new techniques and so forth. When you are up to date, you can decide for yourself what you want to do – and then you can do anything you want."



          "It sounds to me as if I’d be too old to want to do anything by that time."







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          Joseph Snarley is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.









          The closest story I can find by Heinlein that matches your question is 'FOR US, THE LIVING: A Comedy of Customs' (pub.2003).



          It concern our protagonist waking up 150 years after apparently dying in a car crash. Although I cannot find a quote matching your question, the protagonist does catch up on history by means of a few history books (and one evening spent with a history professor). In fact, this catching up is the main bulk of the story (it's far from his best work).




          "Where do we start?"



          "I can’t decide what you are to do about anything, but it seems to me that the very first thing to do is to bring you up to date so that you will fit in twenty-eighty-six. It is a rather different world. You must learn a lot of new customs and a century-and-a-half of history and a number of new techniques and so forth. When you are up to date, you can decide for yourself what you want to do – and then you can do anything you want."



          "It sounds to me as if I’d be too old to want to do anything by that time."








          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          Joseph Snarley is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.








          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer






          New contributor



          Joseph Snarley is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.








          answered 7 hours ago









          Joseph SnarleyJoseph Snarley

          563 bronze badges




          563 bronze badges




          New contributor



          Joseph Snarley is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.




          New contributor




          Joseph Snarley is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.













          • 2





            I tried to read For Us, the Living once but gave up. This question reminds me of The Door into Summer but the hero of that one spends many hours reading old newspapers.

            – user14111
            5 hours ago











          • @user14111, it is indeed a bit of a slog. It works more as an essay on how Heinlein thinks the world will progress in that timeframe than it does a work of fiction.

            – Joseph Snarley
            4 hours ago
















          • 2





            I tried to read For Us, the Living once but gave up. This question reminds me of The Door into Summer but the hero of that one spends many hours reading old newspapers.

            – user14111
            5 hours ago











          • @user14111, it is indeed a bit of a slog. It works more as an essay on how Heinlein thinks the world will progress in that timeframe than it does a work of fiction.

            – Joseph Snarley
            4 hours ago










          2




          2





          I tried to read For Us, the Living once but gave up. This question reminds me of The Door into Summer but the hero of that one spends many hours reading old newspapers.

          – user14111
          5 hours ago





          I tried to read For Us, the Living once but gave up. This question reminds me of The Door into Summer but the hero of that one spends many hours reading old newspapers.

          – user14111
          5 hours ago













          @user14111, it is indeed a bit of a slog. It works more as an essay on how Heinlein thinks the world will progress in that timeframe than it does a work of fiction.

          – Joseph Snarley
          4 hours ago







          @user14111, it is indeed a bit of a slog. It works more as an essay on how Heinlein thinks the world will progress in that timeframe than it does a work of fiction.

          – Joseph Snarley
          4 hours ago




















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