I'm forwarding this from the Reading For the Future list:

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I started an individual letter to several addressees in this
and other DYR/RFF groups, but then decided there were so many
that perhaps this slightly off-topic post might be acceptable
and save time here. Replies expressing grief, generally,
probably should be avoided so as not to clog all our mailboxes.

Mrs. Heinlein, however, actively supported the goals of this
group; and was always interested in and enjoyed receiving
news of its activities. The following was written by another
addressee of this group, Dr. Robert James [[EMAIL PROTECTED]].

Virginia Heinlein passed away peacefully in her sleep in the
early morning of January 18, 2003.  She was 86 years old.  Mrs.
Heinlein was the widow of famed science fiction writer, Robert
A. Heinlein, author of Stranger In a Strange Land and 55 other
books, who died in 1988.  Her death followed a prolonged bout
of respiratory illness, including pneumonia, as well as a
broken hip sustained on Thanksgiving Day, 2002, requiring
surgery and a long recovery.  The couple had no children, but
countless readers around the world refer to themselves as
"Heinlein?s Children."

Virginia Gerstenfeld Heinlein was born April 22, 1916, in
Brooklyn, New York, the daughter of a dentist.  She went to
the Packer Collegiate Institute, a college preparatory high
school, where she finished in three-and-a-half years, always
on the honor roll.  She attended New York University, majoring
in chemistry.  She lettered in swimming, diving, basketball,
and field hockey.  She also reached national competitive levels
in figure skating, the sport that became her lifelong passion.
In the late 1950's, she served on the U.S. Olympic Committee
for Skating.  In time, she came to speak over seven languages,
including French, Latin, Italian, and Russian.

Graduating in 1937, she worked for as a chemist until 1943,
when the WAVE Corps was formed.  She enlisted immediately
and was offered a commission as a WAVE lieutenant, serving
first at the Bureau of Aeronautics, then at the Naval Air
Experimental Station in Philadelphia in 1944 and 1945.  She
met Robert Heinlein there, working as a civilian aviation
engineer because the Navy would not overlook his medical
discharge due to tuberculosis in 1934.  She served as his
assistant on several classified development projects as
a chemist and aviation test engineer.

After World War II, she came to Los Angeles to study for an
unfinished doctorate in biochemistry at UCLA.  She married
Robert Heinlein in Raton, New Mexico, in October 1948.
Thereafter, the two were inseparable; those who knew them
spoke often of their intense and abiding love for each other.
She became his closest companion, aiding him in his writing,
and traveling the world with him.  Virginia shepherded Robert
through two severe near-death illnesses in the seventies
through constant care and love.  She took over the business
aspects of his writing career, freeing him to focus on his
writing.  Together, they made a special project of organizing
local and national blood drives and facilitating cooperation
among all the blood collecting organizations in the world.

Shortly after his death in 1988, she moved to Florida.  She
gathered a selection of her husband's letters in Grumbles
from the Grave, printed for the first time his travel memoir
Tramp Royale and political handbook Take Back Your Government
(originally titled How to Be a Politician), and oversaw the
restoration of several texts she felt had been badly edited,
including Red Planet, Puppet Masters, and Stranger in a Strange
Land.  Throughout her life, she loved reading, cooking,
gardening, music, and politics.  In recent years, declining
eyesight and physical health curtailed some of her favorite
activities, but she began and maintained an active presence
on Internet venues devoted to study of her husband's works,
pursuing this new hobby with much energy.  She endowed the
Robert Anson Heinlein Chair in Aerospace Engineering,
established on August 28, 2001, at Annapolis, by a gift of
over $2.6 million, in honor of her late husband, a graduate
of the Naval Academy's Class of 1929. She also helped to
found The Heinlein Society, an educational charity dedicated
to paying forward to generations to come the many Heinlein
legacies.  She also endowed the public library in Robert
Heinlein's birthplace of Butler, Missouri.

Readers have often remarked on the strength, intelligence, and
power of his female characters; his fictional women were often
based on Virginia Heinlein.  As science fiction writer Spider
Robinson said, "several of Heinlein's women bear a striking
resemblance to his wife Virginia."  Many of Heinlein's books
were dedicated to her. Virginia, or "Ginny" as she preferred
to be called, was his sounding board and source of ideas; she
originated the idea that became Stranger in a Strange Land.
She was his first reader and trusted critic.  Robert Heinlein
once said she was "smarter, better, and more sensible than I
am." In a 1961 letter, he said "She is what I feel to be a good
person in the word's simplest and plainest meaning. Which
includes lashing out with her claws on some occasions when
others may consider it improper  I don't give a damn whether
Ginny is 'proper' or not; I like her.  I like her values." At
the end of one of his later books, Job, the final sentence has
been read by many as Robert Heinlein's own tribute to his
beloved wife: "Heaven is where Margrethe is."

There will be no funeral.  Her ashes will be scattered at sea
in the Pacific, as were her husband's.  Mourners are asked to
make blood donations in her memory, and may make charitable
donations to The Heinlein Society at , or P.O. Box 1254,
Venice, California 90294-1254.

In profound sorrow,

David M. Silver
Secretary Treasurer
The Heinlein Society

______________________________________________________________________
Steve Sloan ......... Huntsville, Alabama =========> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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