The Cat Who Walks Through Walls: Difference between revisions

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Set in the same universe as ''[[The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress]]'', '''''The Cat Who Walks Through Walls''''' is one of [[Robert Heinlein]]'s later works. It features yet another soldier-of-fortune in the character of Richard Ames, a retired colonel who begins the story living on a cushy space station. His easy life is quickly upended when he marries Gwen Novak, who is secretly a Time Agent, and on a mission to save the universe. Richard and Gwen are chased across the galaxy by unknown enemies, and eventually take refuge in a multiverse paradise, populated by many familiar characters from other Heinlein books, including [[Stranger in Aa Strange Land|Jubal Harshaw]] and the ubiquitous [[Author Avatar|Lazarus Long]].
 
The story operates heavily on the ideas perpetuated in [[Time Enough for Love]] and [[Number of the Beast]] -- [[The World as Myth]], Heinlein's personal philosophies regarding group marriages and the perils of socialism. It also features one of the most confusing endings of any of Heinlein's novels, leaving two characters stranded and alone and refusing to say whether or not anything was actually achieved. In fact, the resolution to the [[Cliff Hanger]] ending is not revealed until the sequel, ''[[To Sail Beyond the Sunset]]''.
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** ''[[The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress]]''
** ''[[The Number of the Beast]]''
** ''[[Stranger in Aa Strange Land]]''
** ''[[Time Enough for Love]]''
* [[Monowheel Mayhem]]: Richard and Gwen are attacked on the Moon by a heavily armed monowheel. It looks anachronistic because it is; it's one of the rival time factions trying to kill him.