That’s amazing that someone so devoted to science and against ignorance would want to cover up the cause of his death.
As for his books, I’ve read only one collection of his short stories. Pretty good, but I am a devoted reader of his non-fiction books. His guides to the Bible and Shakespeare are frequently consulted around here.
I’ll probably be in the minority here, but I’ve always love The Black Widower Club series of mysteries. They’re enjoyable short stories where enough clues are given to allow the reader to solve the mystery before it’s revealed. I grew up on Encyclopedia Brown, so this is just a more “adult” version of the genre.
What was the book on the robot/human cop team? I think it might have been I, Robot, or Caves of Steel. The Robots name was Uje? or Lej? or something like that I think. I had to read it as a child as punishment. My parents didn’t spank as much as they made me read books, and I hated that even more. Espeacially when I got to A Conneticuit Yankee in King Aurthurs Court. Ha, I appreciate it now though.
God, how am I suppose to pick one?! I typed in “Asimov” at amazon.com, and it found 1023 results!
For novels, gotta go with Caves and Naked sun. They’re just such well-written mystery/SF (a really hard combination to do fairly). The first three Foundation novels come a close second.
For short stories, I’m putting myself in Mr. Frink’s minority with the Black Widower’s series. And for pretty much the same reason, loved Encyclopedia Brown :). And I always enjoyed the ones with the friend who had an extra-dimensional demon to try to fix people’s problems.
And I’m not even going to try on non-fiction. I mean, this is a guy with at least one book in every major category of the Dewey Decimal system. Science, math, the bible, Shakespear; if you want a basic intro to just about any subject, you can probably find an Asimov book to start you off
And how many people have tried reading the “Asimov’s *” books? You know, like Caliban/Inferno/Utopia and the Foundation prequels with Hari Seldon? I tried, I really did, but they just never seemed to have the good old Isaac spark.
Thanks…I’m pretty sure it was Caves of Steel then. Those names bring back alot of memories about that book. I’m going to have to get it and read it again.
“Breeds There a Man …?” is the story about the suicidal physicist genius who is conscripted by the govt. to help them develop a force field to withstand nuclear attacks. His personal delusion (?) is that humanity is being studied by extraterrestrial intelligences that will surely kill them/him off if they attempt to progress too far (much like bacteria in a lab are killed before they propagate out of control). A classic.
I, too, had forgotten which story that title went with, until a quick search turned up a site that has the entire text of the story … along with the entire text of the whole Foundation Trilogy, I Robot, and many others! Yipe! I shan’t post it for fear of supporting piracy.
Thanks, toadspittle. “Suicidal pysicist genius” was all I needed to remember that one. I was thinking for some reason that it was a robot story; I think I was conflating it with “…That Thou Should Pay Homage to Him”.
I enjoy the Black Widower stories, too, but I don’t think too highly of them as mysteries. Most of them require too much specialized knowledge to solve, and many of the rest are trivial.