Robert Heinlein's novel of suspended animation and time travel opens:
"One winter shortly before the Six Weeks War, my tomcat, Petronius the Arbiter, and I lived in an old farmhouse in Connecticut."
-Robert Heinlein, The Door Into Summer (London, 1974), One, p. 7.
I need not explain the significance either of Rip Van Winkle or of Connecticut. But it is worth noting that:
Van Winkle sleeps;
Saunders time travels;
Heinlein's Dan Davis both sleeps and time travels;
Mark Twain's Connecticut Yankee both time travels and sleeps.
Twain wrote pre-Wells. Wells coined "Time Machine," "Time Traveller" and "time travelling." Twain used the term, "transposition of epochs." The Yankee returns by suspended animation.
I wanted to post about Rip Van Winkle but these few paragraphs will suffice as a post for now.
Anderson acknowledges Washington Irving and Heinlein acknowledges Twain. Heinlein also references HG Wells' The Sleeper Wakes.
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