ISAAC ASIMOVviews, reviews by L. J. Hurst |
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ASIMOV AND THE ROBOTS appeared in VECTOR in 1984
The Alternate Asimovs by Isaac Asimov (Grafton 1987 349pp £3.50)
This volume contains Asimov's novellette versions of Pebble in the Sky and The End of
Eternity, written for magazines in the fifties but rejected then, and the short story "Belief" with
the conclusion Asimov wrote to please John W Campbell and the conclusion he had written
originally. "Belief" is the most interesting of the three because it shows Asimov able to write
two conclusions from the same introduction and theme and make both of them seem as
appropriate.
Asimov wrote about the history of Pebble in the Sky in The Early Asimov, but there are
major discrepancies between what he describes there and the manuscript reprinted in The
Alternate Asimovs. For example, the original title was "inspired by Robert Browning's poem
Rabbi Ben Ezra and was a misquotation" - it is referred to as "Grow Old With Me" but it is
printed as "Grow Old Along With Me" in The Alternate Asimovs even while Asimov in his
foreword to the story says "here it is as originally written for Startling except for the
correction of typos and minor infelicities" and does not mention this major, silent correction.
Asimov has also said that he can remember no detail of the original story but in 1974 he
said he thought Pebble in the Sky was practically a new novel, retaining only Joseph Schwartz
and the Judeo-Roman background (according to Joseph Patrouch in his Science Fiction of
Isaac Asimov). Actually the novellette and the novel are very similar. This is worrying, since it
suggests that Asimov's recollection is untrustworthy, and in turn throws a lot of
bio-bibliographical doubt on his other recollections of working in the Golden Age. Now that
we have what he has claimed to describe we can see that his statements were misleading. What
else might be?
The Alternate Asimovs as is usual comes with the Doctor's running commentaries. I think in one of them he should have corrected his past statements, or at least mention the disparities. He would have appeared more trustworthy and consistent. Against this criticism, as Asimov says of the rejected story "I think Startling could have done lots worse than to have accepted and published it" - it was work of Asimov's recognised standard. People might like to take up the other questions, though. The Big Sun of Mercury by Isaac Asimov This is a Lucky Starr juvenile. Long conversations not only carry the plot, but are also loaded with science which a note says has been proved wrong since. The publishers have not corrected the American spelling. PRELUDE TO FOUNDATION by Isaac Asimov (Grafton 1989 pp460 £3.99)
The early life of Hari Seldon, the man whose theories changed a universe, when Karl Marx only managed to change a world, ought to have been one of great interest. The portrayal of it ought to have been a great challenge. The explanation of that mind's workings require a great understanding. Unfortunately this book provides none of them: it is weak in both invention and explanation. Hari Seldon is an idiot - alleged to be a great mathematician, he never talks of mathematics; alleged to have developed a theory of future history, he is ignorant of history. The facts we are given fail to support any belief in what he does. The book begins just after Seldon has delivered a lecture outlining the mathematical principles that allow the future to be known. This leads to his being hounded through the rest of the novel until he finally finds protection. He takes sanctuary in three different societies in his underground life, and eventually abandons his attempt to know what has happened on planets throughout the past. Trantor, he decides, can supply all the data he needs to develop his theory. What events show us is that Seldon produced his work out of nothing: it was not produced by an analysis of the past, about which he knows nothing. Indeed, he never even seems to know the maths either. Presumably, Seldon should be Dr Asimov's equal if not greater, yet what Asimov gives us is a something much less. This is a book that does not explain the foundation of the Foundation. ROBOT DREAMS by Isaac Asimov
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© L J Hurst 2007