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Isaac Asimov.
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Asimov, Isaac
Isaac Asimov.
American Science Fiction Writer 1920–1992
Isaac Asimov was arguably the single most important fiction author to treat the subject of computers. Also one of th...
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Asimov, Isaac (1920-1992)
Scientist and science fiction writer Isaac Asimov made his reputation in both fields with his prolific writings and his interest in the popularization of science. Asimov publ...
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Asimov, Isaac
Author of more than 500 books on a multitude of subjects, Isaac Asimov (1920–1992) was born in Petrovichi, Russia on January 2. He emigrated to the United States in 1923, sold his...
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The author of nearly five hundred books, Isaac Asimov (1920-1992) is esteemed as one of the finest writers of science fiction and scientific fact in the twentieth century.Asimov was born on January 2,...
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By the time of his death in 1992, Isaac Asimov was widely regarded as one of the most productive and versatile writers of all time. Asimov was best-known for his science-fiction novels and popularized...
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While Isaac Asimov officially celebrated his birthday as 2 January 1920, his birth date is uncertain. Records were not well kept in the U.S.S.R. in the period between World War I and World War II, par...
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Critical Essay by Joseph F. Patrouch, Jr.
"Asimovian." I have used the adjective myself, and I have seen it used by others. What others mean by it I cannot say. But I would like to sugge...
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Critical Essay by Raymond J. Wilson
The solution to one of Asimov's most important questions, the role of the individual in history, lies in one of his most basic principles, the mystery-story ...
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Critical Essay by Steven R. Carter
Before the nineteen-fifties, many critics considered the science fiction mystery novel an improbability—if not an impossibility…. [It was assumed] that...
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Critical Essay by Ron Marinucci
Much of [In Joy Still Felt] is fascinating. In addition to chronicling his personal and professional lives, Asimov offers intelligent perceptions of such varied topics ...
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Critical Essay by Nancie Matthews
["I, Robot"] is an exciting science thriller, chiefly about what occurs when delicately conditioned robots are driven off balance by mathematical violat...
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Critical Essay by Virginia Kirkus' Service
In the lucid and information packed style that has rendered the author outstanding in the juvenile science field, Isaac Asimov describes twenty-six me...
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Critical Essay by Theodore C. Hines
[Breakthroughs in Science is a collection] of brief (1,500 words) essays on the life and work of nearly 30 important scientists and technologists…. Style is ...
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Critical Essay by Betty Flowers
[The Rest of the Robots] is a true delight—reprints of eight short stories and two novels all by Asimov and all written with his characteristic verve, intelligen...
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Critical Essay by Richard W. Ryan
In [Asimov's Mysteries], Isaac Asimov has brought together 14 short stories illustrative of the "science fiction mystery"—a form which, he...
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Critical Essay by Science Books
As the companion volume to Asimov's earlier Breakthroughs in science …, [Great ideas of science] is composed of short essays on famous scientists and thei...
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Critical Essay by George Merrill
The continuing popularity of Asimov's earlier novels should guarantee an audience for [The Gods Themselves]…. The story of earth's demands on its ...
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Critical Essay by Robert J. Anthony
In "More Words of Science," Isaac Asimov exhibits, as he did in his 1959 "Words of Science" (to which this book is a sequel), the same d...
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Critical Essay by The Times Literary Supplement
Every author has his favourite hero, usually based on a flattering version of his own personality. In his first work of fiction for fifteen years, The G...
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Critical Essay by Science Books
The language of science continues to grow at an astounding rate. When Isaac Asimov's book, Words of Science, was published in 1959, term such as "quasar,&...
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Critical Essay by Ellen Lewis Buell
[In "David Starr: Space Ranger," a] tale of the seventieth century, Paul French ingeniously combines mystery with science fiction. His inventiveness a...
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Critical Essay by Brian W. Aldiss
Asimov employed the wide-angle lens for his view of life and it is a pity that his largest milestone, the Foundation trilogy, was written before sf authors were able ...
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Critical Essay by Marjorie Mithoff Miller
The beginning of Isaac Asimov's career as a writer of science fiction coincided closely with the beginning of the development of "social science...
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Critical Essay by Hazel Pierce
Asimov has balanced the demands of [two genres, mystery and science fiction] by building on their common ground.
Both types impose the need for logical, analytical metho...
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Critical Essay by Donald Watt
Asimov is a science fiction novelist with no pretensions toward innovative techniques, hidden allusions, or occult symbolism. He is, as he professes to be, a popular writ...
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Critical Essay by Mark Mansell
Isaac Asimov's previous collection, Buy Jupiter!, was largely a selection of Asimovian trivia, outrageous puns and shaggy dog stories. The Bicentennial Man, howev...
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Critical Essay by Publishers Weekly
Asimov, who has written a virtual galaxy of excellent popular science books,… achieves something valuable [in Extraterrestrial Civilizations] by making a fre...
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Critical Essay by Margaret L. Chatham
[Saturn and Beyond is another] in Asimov's series of astronomy books for junior high, misleadingly titled as always. The first three quarters of the book d...
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Critical Essay by Choice
Isaac Asimov's In memory yet green, [volume] 1 of a two-volume autobiography, suffers from the faults that mar Asimov's fiction; it is long on plot (708 pages of...
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Critical Essay by Villiers Gerson
["Lucky Starr and the Oceans of Venus"] is Paul French's best juvenile science fiction book to date. Crackling with suspense, lit by humor, spark...
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Critical Essay by Harry C. Stubbs
[Saturn and Beyond] consists of a historical description of what we know about the outer parts of the solar system and how we found the information. The author is ver...
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Critical Essay by Thomas Leclair
Like a black hole, Extraterrestrial Civilizations contracts, moving from a billion trillion possibilities to imaginable probabilities as Asimov shows how the origins o...
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Critical Essay by Mary Jo Campbell
[In Extra-Terrestrial Civilizations] Asimov turns his talents for clear explanations of complex scientific subjects to the question of the existence of extraterrestr...
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Critical Essay by Booklist
With more than 200 books including science fact as well as science fiction and mysteries to his credit, it is not surprising that [in Isaac Asimov's Book of Facts] As...
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Critical Essay by Patricia S. Warrick
Isaac Asimov is deservedly regarded as the father of robot stories in SF. He has produced more robot and computer stories than any other writer, and the quality o...
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Critical Essay by Katherine Thorp
[In Asimov on Science Fiction] Asimov's forthright views are presented in a crisp and witty style. His lifetime of experience in the field provides mature judg...
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Critical Essay by Kirkus Reviews
[In Venus: Near Neighbor of the Sun] Asimov uses the description of a single astronomical object to relate much basic astronomy in a direct, easily understood manner. ...
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Critical Essay by Choice
It is tempting to say that [Asimov on science fiction] has been assembled by a robot, but accuracy—and the state-of-the-art—blames the more prosaic computer prin...
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Critical Essay by H. H. Holmes
It seems to be an open secret that "Paul French" is Isaac Asimov; and the latest adventure of Lucky Starr ["Lucky Starr and the Oceans of Venus...
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Critical Essay by Publishers Weekly
That peerless science writer Asimov here presents [Change!], a collection of short essays (most about three pages), all but one of which first appeared in American ...
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Critical Essay by David E. Newton
Asimov's new book on Venus [Venus, Near Neighbor of the Sun] is in much the same vein as his earlier works on Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. They are all compendia...
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Critical Essay by John Clute
[The Complete Robot] collects everything from "Robbie" (1940), which was the first robot story of this the most famous series of robot stories in the world, ...
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Critical Essay by David W. Moore
Isaac Asimov displays a portion of his impressive store of science information in Venus, Near Neighbor of the Sun…. Five of the nine chapters are devoted to Ven...
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Critical Essay by H. H. Holmes
["Lucky Starr and the Big Sun of Mercury"] is much the best of the Space Patrol genre this spring. It's an interplanetary detective story of sabotag...
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Critical Essay by James Gunn
The Foundation Trilogy is a basic work upon which a vast structure of stories has been built. Its assumptions provided a solid footing for a whole city of fictional constr...
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Critical Essay by Robert Berkvist
The swashbuckling science-fiction hero, Buck Rogers style, can be a pretty depressing fellow. In "Lucky Starr and the Rings of Saturn" … Paul Fre...
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Critical Essay by H. H. Holmes
[In "Lucky Starr and the Rings of Saturn"], French-Asimov has fun with fresh variations on the Three Laws of Robotics … and lets David Starr contrib...
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Critical Essay by Theodore M. Bernstein
["Words of Science and the History Behind Them" is] entertaining and informative…. Isaac Asimov, who has written science fiction and scienc...
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Critical Essay by Emily Maxwell
["Words of Science and the History Behind Them"] is an alphabetically arranged collection of one-page essays on such unfamiliar words as catalysis, isomer...
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According to John L. O'Sullivan, "The right of our [America's] manifest destiny to over spread and to possess the whole of the continent". One of the major aspects of the American dream can be c...
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