Wed 10 Dec 2025
Time Travel SF Stories I’m Reading: ROBERT A. HEINLEIN “All You Zombies –”.
Posted by Steve under Science Fiction & Fantasy , Stories I'm Reading[7] Comments

ROBERT A. HEINLEIN “All You Zombies –.” First published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March 1959, after reportedly being rejected by Playboy after that magazine had requested a short work of adult fiction from the author. Collected in The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag (Gnome Press, hardcover, 1959). Reprinted many time since, including The Arbor House Treasury of Modern Science Fiction, edited by Martin H. Greenberg & Robert Silverberg (Arbor House, 1980) and Time Troopers, edited by Hank Davis & Christopher Ruocchio (Baen Books, 2022).
A guy walks into a bar and eventually begins telling on the other side of the counter his life story. It’s a strange one. It turns out that he, so far, has had a very strange existence. He was born a girl but was stolen from his mother when he was born. He did have a child while still female…

And from there it gets complicated. I think I have explained everything as best I can without telling you everything, but between you and me and a handy time travel machine, there is only one major character in the story. Only one.
I loved this story when I first read it, I don’t remember where or when, was totally puzzled the second time. Third time, a couple of days ago, and I loved it again, the pieces all falling into place as smoothly as anyone could make it. If there were any flaws, but given the number of times it’s collected and reprinted, someone else would have found them by now.
The title? That’s one the first things that comes to our protagonist’s mind once he comes to grips with his life in the world. Where (or how) do the rest of us come in?
For the record, reading this yesterday and trying to keep the threads of the story straight, I was struck by how smooth a writer Robert Heinlein was when he was at his prime. He was one of the best.
December 11th, 2025 at 10:17 am
I started reading Heinlein’s SF Juvenile novels in the late 1950s. They enthralled me! I followed Heinlein novels into 1960s, but they started to get a little weird starting with STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND. By the 1970s, I stopped reading current Heinlein novels although many of them became best sellers.
December 11th, 2025 at 2:01 pm
You are right about STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND. I found it a little weird too, maybe even a lot weird. but it was the book that brought him to the attention of a much wider non-SF reading audience. But I wasn’t interested, and I don’t remember reading any of his later books. (I’m sure he never noticed.)
December 11th, 2025 at 4:42 pm
And do keep in mind this is a more emotionally hooked-up variation on RAH’s “By His Bootstraps” from the previous decade.
Rather unfortunate, the degree of solipsism that would creep into his work.
December 11th, 2025 at 5:15 pm
I’m not crazy about the use of big words such as “solipsism” on this blog but in this case I’ll make an exception.
December 11th, 2025 at 5:26 pm
Thanks. Sometimes the overused technical word is too spot-on to be denied.
December 11th, 2025 at 5:34 pm
And for a man who always wanted women to Stay Girls, I can only imagine the transgender content probably put Hefner off, and he was almost certainly certain it would put off his magazine’s readers.
December 11th, 2025 at 10:11 pm
Comes as close to the truth of the matter as anything I could come up with.