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- Subject: Isaac Asimov FAQ, Part 2/4
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- Summary: This document answers frequently asked questions about Isaac Asimov and his work.
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-
- 2.8 What books and articles about Asimov have been written by others?
-
- Books:
-
- _Seekers_of_Tomorrow_, "Isaac Asimov", by Sam Moskowitz, World, 1966, pp.
- 249-265.
-
- _In_Search_of_Wonder_, "Asimov and Empire", by Damon Knight, Advent
- Publishers, 1967, pp. 90-94.
-
- _The_Asimov_Science_Fiction_Bibliography_, compiled by M. B. Tepper,
- Chinese Ducked Press, 1970.
-
- _The_Universe_Makers_, by Donald A. Wollheim, Harper & Row, 1971.
-
- _Asimov_Analyzed_, by Neil Goble, Mirage, 1972.
-
- _Isaac_Asimov:_A_Checklist_of_Works_Published_in_the_United_States,
- _March_1939-May_1972_, by Marjorie M. Miller, Kent State University Press,
- 1972.
-
- _The_Science_Fiction_of_Isaac_Asimov_, by Joseph F. Patrouch, Jr.,
- Doubleday, 1974.
-
- _Words_and_Their_Masters_, "Isaac Asimov", by Israel Shenker, Doubleday,
- 1974, pp. 253-255.
-
- _Asimov's_Foundation_Trilogy_and_Other_Works:
- _Notes,_Including_Life_of_the_Author,_an_Overview_of_Asimov's_Science_Fiction,
- _Categories_of_Science_Fiction,_Analyses_of_the_Works_, by L. David Allen;
- consulting editor, James L. Roberts, Cliffs Notes, c1977
-
- _Isaac_Asimov_, edited by Joseph D. Olander and Martin Harry Greenberg,
- Taplinger Pub. Co., 1977.
-
- _Speaking_of_Science_Fiction:_The_Paul_Walker_Interviews_, by Paul Walker,
- Luna Publications, 1978.
-
- _Dream_Makers:_Interviews_by_Charles_Platt_, "Isaac Asimov", by Charles
- Platt, Berkley, 1980.
-
- _Isaac_Asimov_, by Jean Fiedler and Jim Mele. Ungar, c1982.
-
- _Isaac_Asimov,_the_Foundations_of_Science_Fiction_, by James Gunn, Oxford
- University Press, 1982.
-
- _Isaac_Asimov--Scientist_and_Storyteller_, by Ellen Erlanger, Lerner
- Publications Co., c1986.
-
- _Isaac_Asimov_, by Donald M. Hassler, Starmont House, 1989.
-
- _Isaac_Asimov,_Reader's_Guide_40_, by Donald M. Hassler, 1991.
-
- _Isaac_Asimov_, by William F. Touponce, Twayne Publishers, 1991.
-
- _Isaac_Asimov:_an_Annotated_Bibliography_of_the_Asimov_Collection_at_Boston_University_,
- by Scott E. Green, Greenwood Press, 1995.
-
- _Yours,_Isaac_Asimov:_a_Lifetime_of_Letters_, edited by Stanley Asimov,
- Doubleday, 1995. (due in October)
-
-
- Articles:
-
- "Mike Wallace asks Prof. Isaac Asimov", _The New York Post_, Oct. 8, 1957.
-
- "Master of None", Neil Goble, _Analog_, Feb. 1962.
-
- "Isaac Asimov, Genius in the Candy Store", Sam Moskowitz, _Amazing_, Apr.
- 1962, 66-77.
-
- "You Can't Beat Brains", L. Sprague De Camp, _F&SF_, XXXI (Oct. 1966), 32-35.
-
- _Magazine_of_Fantasy_and_Science_Fiction_, XXXI (October 1966), special
- Asimov Anniversary edition.
-
- (newspaper article), Harvey Aronson, _Newsday_, Mar. 18, 1967.
-
- "The Translator", _Time_, XC (July 7, 1967), 55-56.
-
- "He's One for the Books", Sidney Fields, _New York Daily News_, Oct. 4, 1967.
-
- "Dr. Asimov's 5-Foot Shelf", Mark Howat, _The Record_, Apr. 25, 1968.
-
- "The TV and Dr. A", Greg Bear, _Luna_, No. 1 (June 1969), 5.
-
- "Isaac Asimov, Man of 7,560,000 Words", _New_York_Times_Book_Review_, Aug.
- 3, 1969, 8, 28.
-
- "Asimov's Hundred", Paul Nathan, _Publishers'_Weekly_, CXCVI (Aug. 25,
- 1969), 270.
-
- "A Thinking Woman's Philtre", Judy-Lynn Benjamin, _Luna_, No. 5 (Oct.
- 1969), 14-17.
-
- "The Amazing Asimov", Herbert Kenny, _The_Boston_Sunday_Globe_Magazine_,
- Oct. 12, 1969.
-
- "The War Against Your Children", Max Rafferty, _Orlando_Sentinel_, Oct.
- 22, 1969.
-
- "Coming of the Humanoids: Android Fiction", N. P. Huxley, _Commonweal_,
- XCI (Dec. 5, 1969), 297-300.
-
- "Scientific Enquiry" a _Boston_ Interview with Isaac Asimov", _Boston_,
- LXI (Dec. 1969), 51-54, 82-86, 89-90.
-
- "ESFA Open Meeting-1970", _The WSFA Journal_, No. 73 (Sept.-Nov. 1970), 11-22.
-
- "Amazing Mr. Asimov", P. Farrell, _Writer's_Digest_, LIII (July 1973), 20-22.
-
- "Keeping Posted", _Saturday_Evening_Post_, CCXLVI (Jan. 1974), 6.
-
- "It's an Asimovalanche! The One-Man Book-a-Month Club Has Just Published
- His 179th", _People_Magazine_, Nov. 22, 1976, 110-112, 117-118.
-
- "Backward, March!", _Forbes_, CXIX (Apr. 1, 1977), 74.
-
- "Asimov, the Human Writing Machine", J. L. Collier, _Reader's_Digest_, CXI
- (Aug. 1977), 123-126.
-
- "What Makes Isaac Write?", _Time_, CXIII (Feb. 26, 1979), 79.
-
- "Asimov at 200", T. Lask, _New_York_Times_Book_Review_, (Jan. 28, 1979), 43.
-
- "Science and American Society", F. Jerome, _Current_, CCXXXVII (Nov.
- 1981), 3-10. Also _Environment_, XXIII (Sept. 1981), 25-30.
-
- "A Conversation with Isaac Asimov", F. Kendig, _Psychology_Today_, XVII
- (Jan. 1983), 42-47.
-
- "Isaac Asimov: Modern-Day Renaissance Man", J. Walsh, _The_Humanist_, XLIV
- (July/Aug. 1984), 5.
-
- "Asimov Is Celebrating 300th Book's Publication", E. McDowell, _The New
- York Times_, Dec. 17, 1984, C13.
-
- "A Conversation With Isaac Asimov", Earl G. Ingersoll,
- _Science_Fiction_Studies_ XIV, (Mar. 1987).
-
- "Science Fiction and High Art", Donald M. Hassler, _Extrapolation_, XXVIII
- (Summer 1987), 187-193.
-
- "Isaac Asimov and Science Friction", C. Taylor, _The_Los_Angeles_Times_,
- Feb. 7, 1988, Calendar 22-23.
-
- "Some Asimovian References from the Enlightenment",
- _Science_Fiction_Studies_, XV (Mar. 1988), 36-47.
-
- "Asimov Is Celebrating 300th Book's Publication", E. McDowell,
- _The_New_York_Times_, Dec. 17, 1984, C13.
-
- "The Protean Penman", S. Kaufer, _Time_, CXXXII (Dec. 19, 1988), 80-82.
-
- "Isaac Asimov Speaks", _The_Humanist_, XLIX (Jan./Feb. 1989), 5-13.
-
- "Scientists Say Asimov Put the Stars in Their Eyes", Sheldon Teitelbaum,
- _The_Los_Angeles_Times_, April 8, 1992, E1.
-
- "Isaac Asimov: Master of Future Scenarios", Michael Schrage,
- _The_Los_Angeles_Times_, April 9, 1992, D1.
-
- "Requiem: Isaac Asimov 1920-1992", K. Ferrell, _Omni_, XIV (June 1992), 22.
-
- "Giants Fall", L. David, _Ad_Astra_, IV (July/Aug. 1992), 11.
-
- "Isaac Asimov", K. Frazier, _Skeptical_Inquirer_, XVII (Summer 1992), 351.
-
- "Asimov's Vision", A. Dane, _Popular_Mechanics_, CLXIX (Aug. 1992), 96.
-
- "Isaac Asimov", _Magazine_of_Fantasy_and_Science_Fiction_, LXXXIII (Aug.
- 1992), 5.
-
- "Interview with Isaac Asimov", _Amazing_Stories_, Oct. 1992
-
- "A Celebration of Isaac Asimov: a Man For the Universe",
- _Skeptical_Inquirer_, XVII (Fall 1992), 30-47.
-
- "The Legacy of Isaac Asimov", P. D. Hutcheon, _The_Humanist_, LIII
- (Mar./Apr. 1993), 3-5.
-
- "Isaac Asimov: a One-Man Renaissance", B. Chambers, _The_Humanist_, LIII
- (Mar./Apr. 1993), 6-8.
-
- "Asimov's Laws of Robotics: Implications for Information Technology", part
- 1, _Computer_, (Dec. 1993), 53-61.
-
- "Asimov's Laws of Robotics: Implications for Information Technology", part
- 2, _Computer_, (Jan. 1994), 57-65.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 2.9 What religious beliefs did Asimov have?
-
- Asimov had no religious beliefs; he never believed in either God or an
- afterlife. He considered himself a Humanist, one who believes that it is
- humans who are responsible for all of the problems of society, as well as
- the great achievements throughout history. The Humanists believe that
- neither good nor evil are produced by supernatural beings, and that the
- solution to the problems of humankind can be found without the
- intervention of such beings. Asimov was a strong proponent of scientific
- reasoning who adamantly opposed creationists, religious zealots,
- pseudoscience, and mysticism.
-
- Asimov did not oppose genuine religious feeling in others. He did,
- however, have little patience for intolerance or superstition masquerading
- as religion.
-
- Although he was an atheist, Asimov was proud of his Jewish heritage. His
- parents never made an effort to teach him religion. He did study in
- Hebrew school for several months while his father served as secretary for
- the local synagogue, where he learned some Hebrew and how to read Yiddish.
-
- Asimov did have a great interest in the Bible, and wrote several books
- about it, notably the two volume _Asimov's_Guide_to_the_Bible_ and
- _The_Story_of_Ruth_.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 2.10 Did Asimov do anything other than write all day and all night?
-
- Although famous for writing over eight hours a day, seven days a week,
- Asimov found time to do a few other things beside writing.
-
- He was a member of the Dutch Treat Club, a group that met for lunch every
- Tuesday at the Regency Hotel in New York. He joined the club in 1971 and
- was made president in 1985.
-
- He joined the Baker Street Irregulars in 1973, a group of avid Sherlock
- Holmes fans that held an annual banquet to celebrate Holmes' birthday.
- Asimov admitted that he was not a true Holmes enthusiast, but enjoyed
- delivering banquet toasts, speeches, and singing sentimental songs.
-
- Asimov was a Gilbert & Sullivan enthusiast since his youth, when he
- listened to the plays on the radio. In 1970 he joined the Gilbert and
- Sullivan Society, and attended almost all of their meetings. He regularly
- attended G & S productions in Manhattan, and occasionally served as
- toastmaster at benefit shows. He loved to sing songs from the shows, and
- was quite proud of his singing voice (among other things).
-
- He was also a P. G. Wodehouse fan, and a member of The Wodehouse Society.
- He acknowledged that the character of Henry, the waiter who played a
- central role in his Black Widower stories, was based on Wodehouse's Jeeves
- the butler. He also paid tribute to the influence of Wodehouse in his
- Azazel short stories.
-
- He belonged to an all-male club called the Trap Door Spiders, which met
- for dinner one Friday night every month, treating a guest invited by the
- host to dinner in return for the privilege of grilling him about his life
- and work. The club formed the basis for the Black Widower mystery short
- stories. The characters were loosely modeled on actual club members as
- follows:
-
- Black Widower Trap Door Spider
- ============= ================
- Geoffrey Avalon L. Sprague de Camp
- Emmanuel Rubin Lester del Rey
- James Drake Doc Clark
- Thomas Trumball Gilbert Cant
- Mario Gonzalo Lin Carter
- Roger Halsted Don Bensen
- Henry fictional
-
- Asimov joined Mensa, the high-IQ society, in the early 1960s, but found
- that many of the members were arrogant about their supposed intelligence,
- so he let his membership lapse. However when he moved back to New York,
- he became an active member once again, and gave speeches to groups of
- Mensans on a number of occasions. Yet once again membership became a
- burden for him, so he resigned from the group.
-
- Asimov was a member of the Explorers Club, and served as master of
- ceremonies for two years at their annual banquet.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 2.11 Is it true that Asimov had a fear of flying?
-
- Yes, the same author who described spaceflights to other worlds and who
- argued valiantly for the cause of rationality suffered from an irrational
- fear of heights and flying. This had the consequence of limiting the
- range over which he travelled throughout much of his life.
-
- Asimov discovered that he was acrophobic at the New York World's Fair in
- 1940, when he took his date and first love Irene on a roller coaster,
- expecting that it would cause her to cling to him in fear and give him a
- chance to kiss her. Instead it was he who was terrified while his date
- remained perfectly calm. Two years later, his wife-to-be Gertrude
- convinced him to ride on a roller coaster at Coney Island, and he was once
- again terrified.
-
- Asimov did in fact fly on an airplane twice in his life. The first time
- he did so while working at the Naval Air Experimental Station in
- Philadelphia during World War II. While working on dye markers that made
- ditched pilots more visible to rescue searchers, he developed a test to
- compare dye visibility that did not require a plane flight, but in order
- to validate his test he volunteered to fly in a small plane to observe the
- markers. He was so absorbed in his observations that he didn't suffer
- from any undue fear. His second plane flight took place on his return
- from his army station in Hawaii, in which he flew aboard a DC-3 to San
- Francisco.
-
- After his military service in Hawaii in 1946, Asimov never ventured so far
- from home, and did not often travel great distances. When he did need to
- travel significant distances, he usually took a train, or rode in someone
- else's car, until he learned to drive in 1950. Oddly enough, he found
- that he felt quite comfortable behind the wheel of an automobile. In the
- 1970s he and Janet travelled by train to Florida and California, and they
- took several several sea cruises to such places as the Caribbean, West
- Africa, England, and France.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 2.12 What other notable quirks, fears, and pet peeves did Asimov have?
-
- Asimov was a teetotaler in later life, mainly because in all of his
- experiences with drinking alcoholic beverages, just one or two drinks were
- sufficient to get him drunk. On the day he passed the oral examination
- for his Ph.D., he drank five Manhattans in celebration, and his friends
- had to carry him back to school and try to sober him up. His wife told
- him that he spent that entire night in bed giggling every once in a while
- and saying "*Doctor* Asimov".
-
- He was completely inept at any athletic activity that required any
- coordination; he never learned how to swim or ride a bicycle. Spending
- even ten minutes in the summer sun turned his skin a bright red. In the
- army he had the worst score in his company on the physical-conditioning
- test (though he had the highest score on the intelligence test). He was
- afraid of needles and the sight of blood.
-
- Asimov discovered that he was claustrophiliac, meaning that he was fond of
- enclosed places. He was quite comfortable in small rooms with no windows,
- and always insisted on using artificial lighting when he worked. He
- considered the underground cities on Earth in _The_Caves_of_Steel_ as the
- ultimate windowless enclosures.
-
- He did not allow anyone to call him by any nicknames, except for a few old
- friends who had been calling him Ike for years.
-
- Asimov hated it when his name was misspelled in print or mispronounced by
- others. His desire to have his name spelled correctly even resulted in a
- 1957 short story, "Spell my Name with an 's'".
-
- (Notable instances of his name being misspelled occurred on the cover of
- the November 1952 issue of _Galaxy_, which contained "The Martian Way",
- and on his 1976 Nebula Award for "The Bicentennial Man".)
-
- When in 1939 he wrote a letter to _Planet_Stories_, which printed it and
- spelled his name "Isaac Asenion", he quickly fired off an angry letter to
- them. (His friend Lester Del Rey took great delight in referring to him
- as "Asenion" for many years afterward. On the other hand, Asimov himself
- referred to positronic robots with the Three Laws as "Asenion" robots in
- _The_Caves_of_Steel_.)
-
- Asimov was quite perturbed when Johnny Carson, host of the Tonight Show,
- pronounced his first name as I-ZAK, with equal emphasis on both syllables,
- during an appearance on the television show in New York in 1968.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 3. Biographical (literary)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 3.1 When did he start writing?
-
- When he was eleven years old he began writing
- _The_Greenville_Chums_at_College_, which he planned to be the first book
- in a series. After writing only eight chapters about the adventures of
- boys living in a small town, he gave up after recognizing the fact that he
- didn't know what he was talking about. However he made a very important
- discovery in the process. After he wrote the first two chapters, he told
- the story he had written so far to a friend at school during lunchtime.
- When he stopped, his friend demanded that he continue. When Asimov
- explained that he had told him all that he had so far, the friend asked to
- borrow the book when he was finished reading it. Asimov was astonished to
- discover that his friend thought that he was retelling a story that he
- read. The implied compliment impressed him so much that, from that day
- on, Asimov took himself seriously as a writer.
-
- Asimov's first published writing was a column he did for his high school
- newspaper. His first accepted piece was a humorous essay entitled "Little
- Brothers", which appeared in _The_Boys_High_Recorder_, his high school's
- semi-annual literary publication, in 1934, and is reprinted in
- _Before_the_Golden_Age_. He wrote it in a creative writing class he took
- that year; a class which almost convinced him to give up writing.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 3.2 What was his first published story?
-
- After John Campbell, editor of Astounding Science Fiction, rejected his
- short stories "Cosmic Corkscrew", "Stowaway" and "This Irrational Planet"
- in June, July, and September of 1938, "Marooned Off Vesta" was accepted
- for publication by Amazing Stories in October and was published January
- 10, 1939.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 3.3 What awards did he win for his writing?
-
- Asimov was presented a special Hugo award in 1963 for "adding science to
- science fiction" for his essays in the Magazine of Fantasy and Science
- Fiction.
-
- The Foundation Series was awarded the Best All-time Novel Series Hugo
- Award in 1966.
-
- _The_Gods_Themselves_ won both the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award for
- best novel in 1973.
-
- "The Bicentennial Man" was awarded the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award for
- best novelette in 1977.
-
- _Foundation's_Edge_ was presented with the Hugo for best novel in 1983.
-
- In 1987, he was awarded the special lifetime Nebula Grandmaster award.
-
- "Gold" was presented with the Hugo for best novelette in 1992.
-
- _I._Asimov:_A_Memoir_ won the Hugo Award for best nonfiction in 1995.
-
- "The Mule", the seventh Foundation story published in Astounding Science
- Fiction (which appeared in book form as part two of
- _Foundation_and_Empire_), was awarded a 1946 Retro-Hugo for Best Novel of
- 1945 at the 1996 WorldCon.
-
- He was posthumously inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of
- Fame in 1997.
-
- He won the Thomas Alva Edison Foundation Award in 1957 for his book
- _Building_Blocks_of_the_Universe_.
-
- He was awarded the Howard W. Blakeslee Award from the American Heart
- Association in 1960 for his book _The_Living_River_.
-
- He received the James T. Grady Award of the American Chemical Society in 1965.
-
- He was presented with the Westinghouse Science Writing Award in 1967.
-
- He was awarded fourteen honorary doctorate degrees from various universities.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 3.4 What is Asimov's last book?
-
- Asimov's publishers have on more than one occasion published the Good
- Doctor's "last" book as a marketing ploy. The six titles most often
- so-described are:
-
- _Asimov_Laughs_Again_ (the last book he saw published before his death,
- published in 1992)
-
- _Forward_the_Foundation_ (his last Foundation novel, published in 1993)
-
- _Frontiers_II_ (his last -- to date -- essay collection, published in 1993)
-
- _I._Asimov:_A_Memoir_ (his last autobiographical volume, published in 1994)
-
- _Gold_ (his last -- to date -- anthology of science fiction stories,
- published in 1995)
-
- _Magic_ (his last -- to date -- anthology of fantasy stories, published in 1996)
-
- All this, however, does not preclude the possibility of more books by
- Asimov being published in the future. There are, for example, enough
- uncollected F&SF science essays for one more collection, and enough
- uncollected mystery stories for another. Additional volumes could be
- published in the "Complete Stories" series, as well as other anthologies
- (e.g., "The Honest-to-goodness Complete Robot Stories Book").
-
- All we can say for certain is that with his death, Asimov appears to have
- stopped writing. He has, by no means, stopped publishing. It is
- therefore probably meaningless to refer to Asimov's "last" book in
- absolute chronological terms.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 3.5 Of his own work, what were Asimov's favorite and least favorite
- novels? What were his favorite and least favorite stories?
-
- Asimov's favorite novel was _The_Gods_Themselves_, largely because of the
- middle section, which was both absolutely brilliant and included
- non-humans and sex (Asimov had often been accused of being unable to write
- stories with non-humans or sex and therefore leaving them out of his
- work.)
-
- His least favorite novel was _The_Stars_Like_Dust_. It was scheduled for
- serialization in _Galaxy_, then edited by Horace Gold. Gold absolutely
- insisted on including a subplot about the characters ransacking the Galaxy
- for an ancient document which would utterly revolutionize their political
- order. In the end, it turns out that the document is "gur Pbafgvghgvba bs
- gur Havgrq Fgngrf" (rot-13 coding added as spoiler protection, as if this
- sub-par novel could be truly "spoiled" by giving away plot points).
-
- Asimov loathed the subplot and bitterly resented being forced to add it.
- He offered to his editor at Doubleday, Walter Bradbury, to remove it for
- the hardcover publication, but Bradbury liked the subplot and insisted it
- be left in.
-
- Then to add insult to injury, when the first paperback edition was
- published by Ace, they changed the title (for the worse) and totally
- gutted the novel, to the point that Asimov could hardly recognize it.
-
- Asimov's three favorite stories were (in order): "The Last Question",
- "The Bicentennial Man", and "The Ugly Little Boy" (all found in
- _The_Best_Science_Fiction_of_Isaac_Asimov_, among other places).
-
- Among his least favorite stories were:
-
- "Black Friar of the Flame" (found in _The_Early_Asimov_). The story was
- his first attempt at a "future historical" and was bounced around from
- editor to editor until it was finally published. It was revised a
- half-a-dozen times and rejected ten times in a two-year-period. Asimov
- was so bitter over the story's history that he swore never again to revise
- anything more than twice, and he would even fight over having to do a
- second revision.
-
- (This is his least favorite story among those that most Asimov fans are
- likely to have ever read. He also implies in _The_Early_Asimov_ that it
- is his least favorite story of all time, but this is clarified in
- _In_Joy_Still_Felt_.)
-
- His all-time least favorite story was "The Portable Star"
- (_Thrilling_Wonder_Stories_, Winter 1955). As with "A Woman's Heart,"
- Asimov never authorized its anthologization. He describes it as a sleazy
- attempt to cash in on the new interest in sex in sf started by Philip Jose
- Farmer's 1952 story, "The Lovers."
-
- He also published a story, "A Woman's Heart" in the June 1957 _Satellite_
- which he considered so trivial that he never included it in any of his
- collections.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 4. The Foundation/robot Series
-
- 4.1 What is this _Forward_the_Foundation_ I keep hearing about?
-
- _Forward_the_Foundation_ is the last-written of the Foundation books. It
- was near completion at the time of Asimov's death and published a year
- later. It is currently available in both hardback and paperback.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 4.2 Did Asimov *really* write _Forward_the_Foundation_? Didn't he die
- before it was done, so somebody else really wrote it up from notes?
-
- Yes, Asimov really wrote all of _Forward the Foundation_.
-
- _Forward the Foundation_ was originally planned to be a series of novellas,
- bridging the chronological gap between _Prelude to Foundation_ and
- _Foundation_. The first three were completed long before Asimov died and
- published in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine.
-
- Asimov had completed draft material for the remainder of the book before
- his death. This material required some editing by Doubleday and Asimov's
- widow, Janet, before the book was published, but even Asimov was rarely
- published with no editing at all, and there was no significant expansion of
- incomplete sections done. The final result is correctly characterized as
- being "by Isaac Asimov."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 4.3 What about the contradictions between _Forward_the_Foundation_ and
- other Foundation books?
-
- The whole Foundation series is rife with contradictions. There are two
- main reasons for this.
-
- First of all, Asimov simply didn't enjoy sweating over details in his
- fiction. There are a number of things Asimov enjoyed about writing --
- that's why he wrote so much -- but purging his fiction of contradictions
- was not one of them. As early as 1945, he was finding it more effort than
- it was worth to keep up consistency in the Foundation stories and tried
- (three times) to end the series so that he wouldn't have to deal with it.
-
- Secondly, Asimov's overall plan for the series changed. For example, the
- robot stories and Foundation stories were originally conceived as existing
- in separate fictional universes. It wasn't until the 1980s that he
- started to tie them together explicitly. Other examples would involve
- major spoilers for some of the later books.
-
- (Also, the stories were written over the course of fifty years, starting
- from a time when Asimov was at the unspectacular beginning of his career
- and the Golden Age was a year old, to a time when Asimov was one of
- science fiction's Big Three and John Campbell, for whom the earliest
- stories were written, dead for twenty years. It should not be surprising
- that the seventy-year-old Grand Master should find some of the ideas of
- the twenty-year-old apprentice not quite up to snuff and not worth
- preserving.)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 4.4 Is it true that a new Foundation Trilogy written by three different
- authors was published? How could the publisher be allowed to
- do such a thing?
-
- Yes, The Second Foundation Trilogy was published by HarperPrism. The
- first novel, _Foundation's_Fear_, by Gregory Benford, was published in
- March 1997; the second novel, _Foundation_and_Chaos_, by Greg Bear, was
- published in March 1998; and the third novel of the trilogy, _Foundation's
- Triumph_, by David Brin, was published in April 1999. According to the
- afterword in _Foundation's_Fear_, although the three novels are being
- developed as stand-alone books, they will "carry forward an overarching
- mystery to its end."
-
- The novels were written at the suggestion of Janet Asimov and the
- representative of the Asimov estate. They approached Gregory Benford and
- asked him to write a Foundation book. After giving it some thought, he
- agreed to do so, and suggested that Bear and Brin write additional books
- to form a new trilogy.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 4.5 What is the chronological order of the Foundation books?
-
- In the Author's Note at the beginning of _Prelude_to_Foundation_, Asimov says:
-
- "In any case, the situation has become sufficiently complicated for me to
- feel that the readers might welcome a kind of guide to the series, since
- they were not written in the order in which (perhaps) they should be read.
-
- "The fourteen books, all published by Doubleday, offer a kind of history
- of the future, which is, perhaps, not completely consistent, since I did
- not plan consistency to begin with. The chronological order of the books,
- in terms of future history (and _not_ of publication date), is as follows:
-
- "1. _The_Complete_Robot_ (1982). This is a collection of thirty-one
- robot short stories published between 1940 and 1976 and includes every
- story in my earlier collection, _I,_Robot_ (1950). Only one robot short
- story has been written since that collection appeared. That is 'Robot
- Dreams,' which has not yet appeared in any Doubleday collection.
- [_Robot_Dreams_ (1986) does contain it; see also _Robot_Visions_ (1990)]
-
- "2. _The_Caves_of_Steel_ (1954). This is the first of my robot novels.
-
- "3. _The_Naked_Sun_ (1957). The second robot novel.
-
- "4. _The_Robots_of_Dawn (1983). The third robot novel.
-
- "5. _Robots_and_Empire_ (1985). The fourth robot novel.
-
- "6. _The_Currents_of_Space_ (1952). This is the first of my Empire novels.
-
- "7. _The_Stars,_Like_Dust--_ (1951). The second Empire novel.
-
- "8. _Pebble_in_the_Sky_ (1950). The third Empire novel.
-
- "9. _Prelude_to_Foundation_ (1988). This is the first Foundation novel
- (although it is the latest written, so far).
-
- [9a. _Forward_the_Foundation_ (1993).]
-
- [9b. _Foundation's_Fear_ (1997).] The first novel in the Second Foundation
- Trilogy, it was written by Gregory Benford. Takes place after the first
- chapter of _Forward_the_Foundation_.
-
- [9c. _Foundation_and_Chaos_ (1998).] The second novel in the Second
- Foundation Trilogy, written by Greg Bear. Takes place at the approximate
- time of Hari Seldon's trial.
-
- [9d. _Foundation's_Triumph_ (previously titled _Third_Foundation_ and
- _Secret_Foundation_) (scheduled for March 1999).] By David Brin.
-
- "10. _Foundation_ (1951). The second Foundation novel. Actually, it is
- a collection of four stories, originally published between 1942 and 1944,
- plus an introductory section written for the book in 1949.
-
- "11. _Foundation_and_Empire_ (1952). The third Foundation novel, made up
- of two stories, originally published in 1945.
-
- "12. _Second_Foundation_ (1953). The fourth Foundation novel, made up of
- two stories, originally published in 1948 and 1949.
-
- "13. _Foundation's_Edge_ (1982). The fifth Foundation novel.
-
- "14. _Foundation_and_Earth_ (1983). The sixth Foundation novel."
-
- Note that this order is slightly wrong, in that _Currents_of_Space_
- actually takes place *after* _The_Stars,_Like_Dust--_. Also _Foundation
- and Earth_ was published in 1986, not 1983.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 4.6 What is the order in which the Foundation books should be read?
-
- There are actually three answers to this question.
-
- A) Read them in the order of action, as listed by Asimov.
- B) Read them in the order of publication.
-
- There is no real reason why (A) or (B) is the better order. If you're
- more interested in seeing the development of Asimov's universe, writing,
- and ideas, you may prefer (B). If you are more interested in the course
- of events in Asimov's universe, you may prefer (A). Note, also, that some
- of the more recent books contain spoilers for some of the earlier ones, so
- the impact of some stories may be lessened if you choose (A).
-
- Note that Asimov in the Author's Note quoted does not actually suggest one
- order over the other, but does suggest chronological order as a
- possibility.
-
- C) Just read the ones published in the 1950s (plus _The_Complete_Robot_),
- because the later ones all suck.
-
- No true Asimov fan, of course, would agree that any of the Good Doctor's
- books "suck," but there is pretty broad feeling that the later books are
- not as good as the earlier ones. (There is also pretty broad disagreement
- with this assessment.) In particular, _Foundation_and_Earth_ is
- considered one of the weaker books in the series. Of course, your mileage
- will vary, and you may be one of those who prefers the later books over
- the earlier ones.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 4.7 _Foundation_and_Earth_? What book is that? Why can't I find it on sale in
- a bookstore?
-
- _Foundation_and_Earth_ was published by Doubleday in 1986, and a paperback
- edition was published late in 1987 by Ballantine/Del Rey. Bantam/Spectra
- published new paperback editions of most of Asimov's science fiction
- novels starting in 1990, but when _Foundation_and_Earth_ went out of print
- in the United States, Bantam/Spectra did not acquire the rights. The
- Asimov estate is currently negotiating to have it published again. In the
- meantime, it is only available in the U.K. (published by HarperCollins
- Voyager), from the Science Fiction Book Club <http://www.sfbc.com> and
- from sellers of used and out-of-print books.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 4.8 Whatever happened to the Solarians, who mysteriously disappeared in
- _Robots_and_Empire_?
-
- The fate of the Solarians is explained in _Foundation_and_Earth_.
-
- ------------------------------
-