Follow TV Tropes

Following

History YMMV / TheCatWhoWalksThroughWalls

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Not ymmv


* FairForItsDay: Some of the dialogue between men and women can read as incredibly chauvinistic, but this has to do with the time period the books were written in. YMMV very much on whether or not Heinlein was actually purposefully sexist.
* TheGhost: Mycroft Holmes aka Mike the supercomputer. He is spoken of repeatedly and admittedly the whole reason the operation with Richard is put into action. He never says a word, or is seen "on screen." This even follows through to the sequel ''Literature/ToSailBeyondTheSunset'', where he is reportedly given a human body and wedded to the Long family. Again, never seen.

to:

* FairForItsDay: Some of the dialogue between men and women can read as incredibly chauvinistic, but this has to do with the time period the books were written in. YMMV very much on whether or not Heinlein was actually purposefully sexist.
* TheGhost: Mycroft Holmes aka Mike the supercomputer. He is spoken of repeatedly and admittedly the whole reason the operation with Richard is put into action. He never says a word, or is seen "on screen." This even follows through to the sequel ''Literature/ToSailBeyondTheSunset'', where he is reportedly given a human body and wedded to the Long family. Again, never seen.
sexist.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Grammer Correction


* TheGhost: Mycroft Holmes aka Mike the supercomputer. He is spoken of repeatedly and admittedly the whole reason the operation with Richard is put into action. He never says a word, or is seen "on screen." This even follows through to the sequel ''Literature/ToSailBeyondTheSunset'', where reportedly given a human body and wedded to the Long family. Again, never seen.

to:

* TheGhost: Mycroft Holmes aka Mike the supercomputer. He is spoken of repeatedly and admittedly the whole reason the operation with Richard is put into action. He never says a word, or is seen "on screen." This even follows through to the sequel ''Literature/ToSailBeyondTheSunset'', where he is reportedly given a human body and wedded to the Long family. Again, never seen.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Added a "The Ghost" listing for character Mycroft Holmes.

Added DiffLines:

* TheGhost: Mycroft Holmes aka Mike the supercomputer. He is spoken of repeatedly and admittedly the whole reason the operation with Richard is put into action. He never says a word, or is seen "on screen." This even follows through to the sequel ''Literature/ToSailBeyondTheSunset'', where reportedly given a human body and wedded to the Long family. Again, never seen.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


* ThirtySuePileUp: When all the characters from Heinlein's other books wind up in the same room together. If you aren't familiar with his previous work, good luck even telling all the charmingly arrogant libertarian supergenius horndogs apart without a scorecard. Some of them are even clones of each other!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ThirtySuePileUp: When all the characters from Heinlein's other books wind up in the same room together. If you aren't familiar with his previous work, good luck even telling all the charmingly arrogant libertarian supergenius horndogs apart without a scorecard. Some of them are even clones of each other!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* FairForItsDay: Some of the dialogue between men and women can read as incredibly chauvinistic, but this has to do with the time period the books were written in. YMMV very much on whether or not Heinlein was actually purposefully sexist.

Top