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Where to Start with Joe Haldeman: A Reading Guide

Where to start with Joe Haldeman — whether to begin with The Forever War, Forever Peace, or The Accidental Time Machine. A complete guide to the Hugo-winning SF author.

By Clara Whitmore

Joe Haldeman (born 1943) is the American science fiction novelist and Vietnam veteran whose The Forever War (1974) — a direct response to his own combat experience translated into interstellar science fiction — won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards and is considered one of the finest anti-war novels in the genre. Haldeman’s fiction consistently returns to the themes of his military service: the dehumanisation of combat training, the senselessness of war against an incomprehensible enemy, the impossibility of homecoming when the society that sent soldiers to fight has changed beyond recognition. Forever Peace (1997) also won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards, making Haldeman one of the rare authors to achieve this with more than one novel.


Where to Start: The Forever War (1974)

The essential Haldeman — and one of the finest anti-war novels of the twentieth century, regardless of genre. William Mandella is conscripted into Earth’s military to fight the Taurans, an alien species that may or may not have attacked a human ship and which no human has been able to communicate with or understand. He trains, fights, and survives.

The novel’s central device is relativity: the distances involved in interstellar travel mean that time passes differently for soldiers on campaign than for Earth. Mandella’s first tour of duty is two years for him and twenty-seven years for Earth. By his second tour, decades more have passed. Each return to Earth is a homecoming to a world that has changed so much as to be unrecognisable — each time, Mandella is a stranger in his own civilisation.

Haldeman was writing about Vietnam. The alien enemy that is never understood, the training that strips soldiers of individuality, the combat that kills soldiers for no strategic purpose, the homecoming to a society that has moved on — all of it is legible as a transformed account of American military experience in Southeast Asia. The science fiction frame does not diminish the novel’s power; it provides the distance necessary to say things directly that direct memoir cannot.

The novel is short — about 250 pages — and fast. It remains in print fifty years after publication.


Forever Peace (1997)

Haldeman’s companion novel — not a sequel but an independent work set in a different future, applying his anti-war intelligence to neural-linked remote combat. Also won the Hugo and Nebula. Can be read independently of The Forever War.


The Accidental Time Machine (2007)

Haldeman’s more playful work — a time-travel novel with a lighter tone than his war fiction, following a physics student whose research project inadvertently produces a time machine. His most accessible entry point for readers who find The Forever War’s military content daunting.


Reading Joe Haldeman

Begin with The Forever War — it is his essential work and the most direct expression of his intelligence and experience. Read Forever Peace for the companion novel. The Accidental Time Machine offers a different register — more playful and less intense.


For the full Joe Haldeman bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Joe Haldeman author page on Editors Reads.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Where should I start with Joe Haldeman?

The Forever War (1974) is the essential starting point — Haldeman's Hugo and Nebula Award-winning novel about soldiers fighting an interstellar war against the Taurans, in which time dilation means that each tour of duty lasts years while centuries pass on Earth. It is simultaneously the best anti-Vietnam War novel to use science fiction as its vehicle and one of the finest explorations of alienation and the impossibility of homecoming in the genre. A short, fast, powerful novel that remains as relevant as when it was written.

What is The Forever War about?

The Forever War follows William Mandella, conscripted to fight in Earth's first interstellar war, as he makes multiple tours of duty and returns each time to an Earth that has changed beyond recognition — decades or centuries having passed from the Earth's perspective while only years passed for Mandella in his relativistic travel. The novel is Haldeman's account of his own Vietnam experience translated into science fiction: the combat is brutal and senseless, the enemy is never understood, the training dehumanises soldiers, and the homecoming is impossible because the country that sent them to war has become unrecognisable. Won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards.

What is Forever Peace about?

Forever Peace (1997) is a companion novel to The Forever War set in a completely different future — 2043, where American soldiers fight remote wars through neural-linked robotic soldiers called soldierboys, making killing physically clean while leaving the dying politically invisible. A physicist discovers a plot to recreate the Big Bang. Also won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards, making Haldeman one of only two authors to have achieved the double-double. Not a direct sequel to The Forever War.

Is The Forever War still relevant today?

The Forever War is, if anything, more relevant today than when it was written. Its central insight — that soldiers sent to fight incomprehensible wars against an enemy they never understand return to a society that has moved on without them — has proven prescient about every American military intervention since Vietnam. The time dilation mechanism is not just a science fiction conceit; it is a perfect metaphor for the alienation of combat veterans from civilian society. The 1974 novel has been in print continuously for fifty years for this reason.

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