Ordeal in Space

"Ordeal in Space" is a science fiction short story by American writer Robert A. Heinlein, originally published in Town & Country, May 1948. It is one of Heinlein's Future History stories, and appears in his collection The Green Hills of Earth.

Plot summary

A spaceship's crewman is called to repair an antenna while his ship is still under spin. He is unable to hold on, despite supreme effort; he drifts away from the ship and has far too much time to ponder things. When he returns to Earth, he is unable to work as a spaceman and has a fear of heights. After living in fear and sadness for a time, he must face his troubles while rescuing a kitten stuck on the 35th-floor ledge of a building.

Heinlein includes a variant verse to the hymn Eternal Father, Strong to Save, dedicated "to those who venture into space," in the story. Originally titled "Broken Wings", the story was rejected by The Saturday Evening Post. A reading of this story was broadcast on BBC Radio 7 on July 14, 2007.

gollark: Most *newer* languages only have one or two compilers, in my experience.
gollark: Haskell attracts the sort of people who write Haskell interpreters for fun, but GHC supports all the extensions and libraries and whatnot.
gollark: It's the only actually used one.
gollark: F# is cool too.
gollark: C makes you aware of what would be happening if your computer was a PDP-11, but it isn't.



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