All You Zombies: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(added text)
Line 33: Line 33:
* [[Title Drop]] - In the closing lines.
* [[Title Drop]] - In the closing lines.
* [[Twenty Minutes Into the Future]] - As with all Heinlein's works. The latest date given in the story is 1993.
* [[Twenty Minutes Into the Future]] - As with all Heinlein's works. The latest date given in the story is 1993.
* [[Wrong Genetic Sex]]: The protagonist starts out as an intersex female and...it gets complicated. Her actual degree of intersexualization approaches true [[Hermaphrodite|hermaphrodism]] and isn't biologically possible, at least for normal humans.
* [[Wrong Genetic Sex]]: The protagonist starts out as an intersex female and...it gets complicated. Her actual degree of intersexualization approaches true [[Hermaphrodite|hermaphrodism]] and isn't biologically possible, at least for normal humans. {{spoiler|[[Fridge Brilliance|Then again, being a self-contained temporal-biological loop, it's unlikely that the protagonist is in any way ''related'' to "normal" humans.]]}}
* [[You Already Changed the Past]]
* [[You Already Changed the Past]]



Revision as of 19:19, 26 August 2021

"I know where I came from, but where did all you zombies come from?"

"--All You Zombies--" (1959) is a short story by Robert A. Heinlein that presents to the reader an interesting time paradox. "The Unmarried Mother," as a bar patron calls himself, unloads his life story onto a willing barman. The barman, however, knows more about The Unmarried Mother than he could ever guess.

At roughly a dozen pages, "--All You Zombies--" provides a provocative story and incorporates many of Heinlein's favorite themes.

As the story contains a twist ending, it is recommended you read it for yourself before reading the associated tropes.

Tropes used in All You Zombies include: