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Waldo & Magic, Inc.
- Narrated by: MacLeod Andrews
- Length: 8 hrs and 20 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Don't count out the underdog... Two classic short novels by Robert A. Heinlein, science fiction’s Grand Master.
Waldo
North Power Air is in trouble. Their aircraft are crashing at an alarming rate and no one can figure out the cause. Desperate for an answer, they turn to Waldo, a crippled misanthropic genius who lives in a home in orbit around Earth, where the absence of gravity means that his feeble muscle strength does not confine him helplessly in a wheelchair. But Waldo has little reason to want to help the rest of humanity - until he learns that the solution to Earth’s problems also holds the key to his own.
Magic, Inc.
In a world where almost everything is done by magic spells, Magic, Inc., under the guise of an agency for magicians, is systematically squeezing the small independent magicians out of business. Then one businessman stood firm. And with the help of an Oxford-educated African shaman and a little old lady adept at black magic, he was willing to take on all the demons of Hell to resolve the problem - once and for all.
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What listeners say about Waldo & Magic, Inc.
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Jane Taylor
- 08-04-14
It was better when I was younger *sigh*
I LOVED this in the 1970s when I was a kid but it was a struggle to get through as an adult. I thought I would rediscover Heinlein afresh after 40 years but what I discover is that the same strong and (to me) mildly offensive attitudes (political, social, sexual) that infused his later work so strongly and made me uncomfortable as a young adult woman are here too in the older stuff, just more subtly. They say you can't go home- too bad...
A young teen might really like these though- Heinlein is endless inventive.
7 people found this helpful
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- Jerry "JSFMIDIG"
- 06-19-14
The complex world's of science,
Using superstition and magic to create an even reading field for 2 short stories.
I always believe a wise man should glance over his sholder before changing lanes. Glance back in history before making the same mistakes or repeating them.
Heinlien removes science of the 1950s, to tell a good story of science fiction, but needed to remove science fact (still too new in a time line and in scope) and uses magic to replace science fact in electrigal grids, electronics of heated plates in picture tubes, voice coils, amplification, circuit boards, etc… Way, way too new in history to make the magic believable back then. But, he took a gamble with his story (1st of it's kind) and got published - won!
Write a story like that today, it would suck big time! He took a gamble, won!
3 people found this helpful
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- Jim "The Impatient"
- 02-13-16
I'M NEVER IN A HURRY
I'M NOT IN THE HABIT OF JESTING
I seem to be very hot and cold on Heinlein's writings. I either hate it or love them. I love all of his Juvenile novels. These novels are usually positive and encourage education and working hard. His adult novels usually are all about free love, engineers and are a bit negative on the government. According to the introduction this was his first novel to be published, matter of fact supposedly the start of the golden age.
You grok.
The book had to have been popular at the time, since the word Waldo is still used today. As explained in the introduction, this is two novellas put together to make a book. These stories have nothing to do with each other. Heinlein himself did not understand why they were being put together. The intro tries to explain why they go together, but not too convincingly. Waldo is slow moving. It has an interesting main character who is hard to like. In the 40's, readers were more into the explaining of things and life was slower, so slow moving stories were not a problem. Today, we care less about the explanation and we have less patience. I do not see today's readers enjoying these two novellas. Magic Inc., is like the business end of Magic. The story does a of lot explaining about the rules and regulations of magic. So much so, that it takes a lot of the joy out of the story. Dresden fans are not going to sit through this manual on magic.
I am normally a fan of Andrews, but his narration matched the slowness of these stories. I do think another narrator could have spiced this up a bit.
14 people found this helpful
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- Lenina Huxley
- 12-05-21
Imaginative and Pioneering
I was somewhat hesitant to get this book due to the subjects, but I'm a Heinlein fan and Waldo came with high recommendations from friends who'd read it.
It's amazing that these stories were written in the early 1940s. They seem modern, and with just a very few exceptions, stories that might appear in a movie or TV show today.
I found the analysis at the end very interesting and insightful. If you are a Heinlein fan, give these stories a try. You'll see just how far ahead he was of his time.
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- Christopher Headley
- 09-12-21
Both stories, just kind of; don't...
Waldo takes the reader on an interesting path that kind of just loses interest in itself and decides not to bother. In a sort of meta way maybe that was the point. Because that's essentially what happens to the character too. But at the same time it just leaves you asking...
Magic Inc starts off as a kind of detective novel, then it becomes an exploration of Harry Potter's Diagon Ally for a while, followed but a deep dive into the dull politics of magic, followed by a quick trip through Dante's Inferno mixed with the Hell scenes from the Southpark movie, followed immediately by "and they all lived happily ever after..." A lot of threads are started early in the story that you anticipate might get really interesting. But again, they kind of just don't bother.
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- KS Dad
- 04-13-21
great presentation of a classic
Imagine if Tesla had finished his power distribution ideas, or ancient magic practice were real and lose in today's world. wonderful material and every bit as fantastic today as when he wrote it.
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- Angus
- 12-01-18
Fun Stories
What can you say, it’s classic Heinlein at his best. Both are a lot of fun.
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- Michael J. Russo
- 09-03-16
Audible will not allow it to play
What disappointed you about Waldo & Magic, Inc.?
Audible not letting it play
What was one of the most memorable moments of Waldo & Magic, Inc.?
When I bought it.
What didn’t you like about MacLeod Andrews’s performance?
Do not know have yet to hear him.
If you could play editor, what scene or scenes would you have cut from Waldo & Magic, Inc.?
The part when audible sends an email to me.
Any additional comments?
I searched Audible's site and found that they limit burning the book to just once. I haven't even been able to listen to the two books that were down loaded.
1 person found this helpful
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- larry
- 08-08-16
very different
For an RAH story but just as enjoyable as all of his others. It made me smile and think more than once
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- LC
- 01-12-21
A bit different - enjoyable
These two stories are a bit different than the usual science fiction as they include magic from two perspectives.
I particularly like the first one, Waldo, as i found the different perspective refreshing, as well as the story itself and the pictures it paints.
1 person found this helpful