I got a $30.00 Amazon gift card and was looking for something to buy.
I was thinking of Asimov on Physics, but he was such a prolific writer, maybe you have a favorite Asimov science book to suggest.
I like all kinds of science books and my teenaged kids are interested in physics and chemistry. I’m sure some of his science books are dated now, but the basics should still be solid.
How much is his two-part autobiography, In Memory yet Green and In Joy Still Felt?
The titles come from this poem:
In memory yet green, in joy still felt,
The scenes of life rise sharply into view.
We triumph; Life’s disasters are undealt,
And while all else is old, the world is new. *
It’s been awhile since I read it, (and maybe I just read the OT volume) but I’d give it a mixed review. It starts out very thoroughly, analyzing the history and structure of Genesis, but as it continues it just becomes Ike making a few comments about the things that interest him. History. Trivia. Philosophy. So it’s not a serious reference book on the Bible, but is (like almost everything he wrote) good reading.
Asimov is often his own best subject, so I return to his two volume autobio more than anything else. In Memory Still Green. In Joy Still Felt.
For my money, it’s gotta be Asimov’s The Sensuous Dirty Old Man. It is the only book of his that I think honestly encapsulates how dreadfully unpleasant the man was to be around when he was alive. (Although I admit his books of erotic limericks also try their best.)
It’s been a long, long time since I’ve read any Asimov science essay, but I don’t remember one single clinker among them. Pick any collection; you won’t go wrong.
You might also consider “Asimov Laughs Again”, his second (and better) collection of jokes and anecdotes.
Can you even find these outside of used-book sites?
I was underwhelmed by Asimov’s Guide to the Bible. It’s an interesting read, but the good Doctor bit of more than he could chew in that case.
A lot of his books, while good, have been overtaken by a lot of subsequent reseach, and I suspect they’re outdated. His guide to The Brain and The Bloodstream and suchlike would probably need revamping. And who would be reading his guide to the Slide Rule these days?
For my money, read his Annotated Gulliver’s Travels (which gives you all those references you’ve heard about, but not actually had pointed out) or his Annotated Paradise Lost, or his Words from the Myths.
On topic: Asimov wrote a non-fiction book called “The Universe” which was good. Notably, it mentions Tom Lehrer (and lists him in the index); also, one of Asimov’s friends (Pohl?) noted that only Asimov could write a one-volume book covering the entire universe, while taking two large volumes for his autobiography.