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Abercrombie, Joe
Achebe, Chinua
Adams, Richard
Ambrose, Stephen E
Anderson, M. T.
Angelou, Maya
Asimov, Isaac
Atwood, Margaret Eleanor
Austen, Jane
Baldwin, James
Banks, Iain M.
Bardugo, Leigh
Beatty, Paul
Bellefleur, Alexandria
Bester, Alfred
Bradbury, Ray
Brandt, Anthony
Brontë, Charlotte
Brontë, Emily
Brooks, Terry
Brown, Daniel
Bryson, Bill
Buck, Pearl S.
Burgess, Anthony
Capote, Truman
Carey, Jacqueline
Carroll, Lewis
Carson, Rachel
Chandler, Raymond
Child, Julia
Christian, Brian
Christie, Agatha
Clarke, Susanna
Coelho, Paulo
Cohen, Leonard
Collins, Wilkie
Conrad, Joseph
Cook, Glen
Cooper, Susan
Crichton, Michael
Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly
Dahl, Roald
Defoe, Daniel
DeMarco, Tom
Dick, Philip K.
Dickens, Charles
Doerr, Anthony
Doyle, Arthur Conan
Eckert, Allan W.
Eggers, Dave
Eliot, T. S.
Ellroy, James
Faulkner, William
Ferlinghetti, Lawrence
Fey, Tina
Feynman, Richard Phillips
Fitzgerald, F. Scott
Flynn, Gillian
Foo, Stephanie
Forester, C. S.
Frank, Anne
Gaiman, Neil
Gamma, Erich
Gibbons, Stella
Gibson, William
Gladwell, Malcolm
Graeber, David
Grandin, Temple
Grisham, John
Guin, Ursula K. Le
Haddon, Mark
Hari, Johann
Harris, Thomas
Haupt, Lyanda Lynn
Hawking, Stephen
Hawthorne, Nathaniel
Hazelwood, Ali
Heinlein, Robert A.
Heller, Joseph
Hemingway, Ernest
Herbert, Frank
Hesse, Hermann
Higginbotham, Adam
Hillenbrand, Laura
Hilton, James
Hinton, S. E
Hobbes, Thomas
Hoover, Colleen
Hope, Anthony
Hudson, W. H
Hugo, Victor
Huxley, Aldous
Isaacson, Walter
Jackson, Shirley
Jaku, Eddie
James, Henry
Johnson, Maureen
Jordan, Robert
Joyce, James
Kafka, Franz
Kahneman, Daniel
Kalanithi, Paul
Kelly, Erin
Kerasote, Ted
Kerouac, Jack
Kesey, Ken
King, Stephen
Kleypas, Lisa
Krakauer, Jon
Kuang, R. F.
Kurson, Robert
Larsson, Stieg
Laxness, Halldór
Lee, Harper
Lem, Stanisław
Lewis, C. S.
Lindhout, Amanda
London, Jack
Lowry, Malcolm
Malone, Dumas
Malory, Thomas
Mandel, Emily St. John
Maurier, Daphne Du
McCarthy, Cormac
McCourt, Frank
McCullough, David G.
McDougall, Christopher
McIntyre, Vonda N.
McKillip, Patricia A.
Merton, Thomas
Miéville, China
Miller, Madeline
Milton, John
Mitchell, Margaret
Moore, Kate
Morris, Edmund
Morrison, Toni
Mukherjee, Siddhartha
Munroe, Randall
Murray, Paul
Nabokov, Vladimir Vladimirovich
Nelson, Willie
Niven, David
Noah, Trevor
O'Brien, Flann
O'Brien, Tim
Orwell, George
Parry, Richard Lloyd
Plath, Sylvia
Pratchett, Terry
Preston, Douglas J.
Reisner, Marc
Rice, Anne
Robbins, Tom
Roth, Philip A.
Rowling, J. K.
Saavedra, Miguel de Cervantes
Sagan, Carl
Salinger, J. D.
Sapolsky, Robert M.
Saunders, George
Scott, Walter
Shannon, Samantha
Shearer, Eleanor
Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft
Shriver, Lionel
Siegel, Seth M.
Silver, Josie
Silverstein, Shel
Simmons, Dan
Singh, Simon
Skloot, Rebecca
Sledge, E.B.
Springsteen, Bruce
Steinbeck, John
Stephenson, Neal
Stevenson, Bryan
Stevenson, Robert Louis
Stoker, Bram
Stone, Irving
Styron, William
Swift, Jonathan
Thoreau, Henry David
Tolkien, J. R. R.
Tolstoy, Leo
Toole, John Kennedy
Turow, Scott
Twain, Mark
Tyson, Neil deGrasse
Updike, John
Vonnegut, Kurt
Walker, Alice
Walls, Jeannette
Wariner, Ruth
Weir, Andy
Wells, H. G.
White, Antonia
White, E. B.
Whitman, Walt
Wilde, Oscar
Woolf, Virginia
Zusak, Markus
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Summary
Starship Troopers takes place in the midst of an interstellar war between the Terran Federation of Earth and the Arachnids (referred to as "The Bugs") of Klendathu. It is narrated as a series of flashbacks by Juan Rico, and is one of only a few Heinlein novels set out in this fashion. The novel opens with Rico aboard the corvette Rodger Young, about to embark on a raid against the planet of the "Skinnies," who are allies of the Arachnids. We learn that he is a cap(sule) trooper in the Terran Federation's Mobile Infantry. The raid itself, one of the few instances of actual combat in the novel, is relatively brief: the Mobile Infantry land on the planet, destroy their targets, and retreat, suffering a single casualty in the process. The story then flashes back to Rico's graduation from high school, and his decision to sign up for Federal Service over the objections of his father. This is the only chapter that describes Rico's civilian life, and most of it is spent on the monologues of two people: retired Lt. Col. Jean V. Dubois, Rico's school instructor in "History and Moral Philosophy," and Fleet Sergeant Ho, a recruiter for the armed forces of the Terran Federation. Dubois serves as a stand-in for Heinlein throughout the novel, and delivers what is probably the book's most famous soliloquy on violence, and how it "has settled more issues in history than has any other factor." Fleet Sergeant Ho's monologues examine the nature of military service, and his anti-military tirades appear in the book primarily as a contrast with Dubois. (It is later revealed that his rants are calculated to scare off the weaker applicants). Interspersed throughout the book are other flashbacks to Rico's high school History and Moral Philosophy course, which describe how in the Terran Federation of Rico's day, the rights of a full Citizen (to vote, and hold public office) must be earned through some form of volunteer Federal service. Those residents who have not exercised their right to perform this Federal Service retain the other rights generally associated with a modern democracy (free speech, assembly, etc.), but they cannot vote or hold public office. This structure arose ad hoc after the collapse of the 20th century Western democracies, brought on by both social failures at home and military defeat by the Chinese Hegemony overseas (assumed looking forward into the late 20th century from the time the novel was written in the late 1950s). In the next section of the novel Rico goes to boot camp at Camp Arthur Currie, on the northern prairies. Five chapters are spent exploring Rico's experience entering the service under the training of his instructor, Career Ship's Sergeant Charles Zim. Camp Currie is so rigorous that less than ten percent of the recruits finish basic training; the rest either resign, are expelled, or die in training. One of the chapters deals with Ted Hendrick, a fellow recruit and constant complainer who is flogged and expelled for striking a superior officer. Another recruit, a deserter who committed a heinous crime while AWOL, is hanged by his battalion. Rico himself is flogged for poor handling of (simulated) nuclear weapons during a drill; despite these experiences he eventually graduates and is assigned to a unit. At some point during Rico's training, the 'Bug War' has begun to brew, and Rico finds himself taking part in combat operations. The war "officially" starts with an Arachnid attack that annihilates the city of Buenos Aires, although Rico makes it clear that prior to the attack there were plenty of "'incidents,' 'patrols,' or 'police actions.'" Rico briefly describes the Terran Federation's loss at the Battle of Klendathu where his unit is decimated and his ship destroyed. Following Klendathu, the Terran Federation is reduced to making hit-and-run raids similar to the one described at the beginning of the novel (which, chronologically would be placed between Chapters 10 and 11). Rico meanwhile finds himself posted to Rasczak's Roughnecks, named after Lieutenant Rasczak (his first name is never given). This part of the book focuses on the daily routine of military life, as well as the relationship between officers and non-commissioned officers, personified in this case by Rasczak and Sergeant Jelal. Eventually, Rico decides to become a career soldier and attends Officer Candidate School, which turns out to be just like boot camp, only "squared and cubed with books added."[15] Rico is commissioned a temporary Third Lieutenant as a field-test final exam and commands his own unit during Operation Royalty; eventually he graduates as a Second Lieutenant and full-fledged officer. The final chapter serves as more of a coda, depicting Rico aboard the Rodger Young as the lieutenant in command of Rico's Roughnecks, preparing to drop to Klendathu as part of a major strike, with his father (having joined the Service earlier in the novel) as his senior sergeant and a Third Lieutenant-in-training of his own under his wing.
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