Among many other varied accomplishments, Asimov is well read and loves Dickens and Shakespeare (well, you'd be a fool if you didn't). He gives us some good stories here, and they're not all fiction. But if you're after a collection of his best SF stories, this is not it (The Martian Way [1964] is that). This is a late collection (largely) of what's left unpublished in his many other anthologies.
With only two short stories of any substance - Cal and Gold - this set of frivolous diversions gives us only a little insight into Asimov's brilliance than, say, any of the Foundation trilogy [1951-3], or The Gods Themselves [1972], for example, but rather are more illustrative of Asimov's relentless narrative and inventive hyperactivity. Section 2 provides introductory covers to his signed anthologies. Section 3 are his words of wisdom on his craft.
One of the problems of a compilation of this kind is that the poor (rare) gets bundled in with the average (often) and the good or thought-provoking (often). As a result, the median is always lower than the best - and the promise. Asimov may have been the most prolific of writers, but surely the rules of probability occur in his essays as in his fiction. This is for completists, and therefore, for me. If you want a truly excellent book of a writer on writing - and this was not intended as such, only in part turns out to be - see Stephen King's On Writing: A Memoir Of The Craft [1999] and Margaret Atwood's On Writers and Writing [2202]. George Orwell has written a couple too (Books v. Cigarettes [1952]). But I don't know of one by an SF writer...
Some of the best advice in his essays on writing are particular to his own method. He recommends reading a lot in the field you intend to write about, start with several short stories before attempting the novel, do as many revisions as you feel comfortable with, and then stop (unless the editor demands another, then face the consequences, one of which is to tote it elsewhere), and find out if you are the kind of writer who needs an outline, by doing one, and try sticking to it. Do your research, especially the science if you're writing science fiction. Otherwise, discover your own style, and don't obviously plagiarise (that's not, obviously, don't plagiarise). Take from the canon, but give something new back.
Here's a few of what I consider the best, the worst or the notable...
+ Part One - The Final Stories
· Cal [1990] - 6.47
It has been observed that the ultra-prolific Asimov was intent in his later life to be even more prolific. These stories of the '80s and early '90s are part of that determination. And the essential pitfall of that objective is, it is apparent, a sacrifice of quality. It has also often been observed that his best output was from the '50s, the time of the original Foundation trilogy. Both aspects are fiercely telling in this opening story, which was intended as wit and comic adroitness, but which was a chore I little wish to repeat. Very poor. It seems to be of a kin with his six Tales Of The Black Widowers, where 6 professionals meet at a restaurant to tell each other tales of, and solve mysteries. We shall see...
· Hallucination [1995] - 6.8
A neat glimpse into the wider imagination of Asimov - such as the creation of the Foundation series, or the Galactic Empire novels - and how he can create a self-contained microcosm of a full science fiction story in a tidbit.
· In The Canyon [1995] - 3.33
This missive from Mars implies that we should be populating it about now.
· Good-bye To Earth [1989] - 7.2
The probable cause of the human diaspora. Bear in mind that Iain Banks was writing about supremely advanced orbitals at around this time... (The Player Of Games [1988]).
· Fault-Intolerant [1990] - 6.57
Asimov's humorous depiction of the intelligent word processor reminds me of my first attempt to go into business with an Amstrad PC1640. It had 16Kb of RAM - or was that 640Kb? - and duel floppy disks - I didn't ever see the need for the enormous hard disk space of 10Mb! Or 20! Anyway, this thing had TWO operating systems, and GEM was the dazzling GUI that allowed me to do all sorts of things I didn't know how to do. All I wanted to do, with my trusty dot matrix printer, was go into business with my copy-typist partner to type out students' theses. It seemed an unsinkable ship! Three weeks later - and two weeks over deadline - I delivered said MS to the happy student - a happy student builds in contingency - and my partner and I slept for 3 days solid, recovering. But boy, did I love that Amstrad PC1640. I could even go into my dBase database and amend a bug in the record count via Hex! I may not have been able to start a proper business with it, but I could debug proprietary databases via the back door. I only wish the damned thing had learned how to copy type - I would have been a billionaire (since a millionaire is peanuts, today).
· Kid Brother [1990] - 6
Macabre humour, but a fragment off Bicentennial Man [1976], without the affection.
· Gold [1991] - 7.8
By far the best of the stories in this collection, Asimov introduces his cast and technological theme with Shakespeare's Lear. He then goes on to portray the visualisation - with sublimation - of the triple-characters of one of his best novels, The Gods Themselves [1972]. Not only is this all brilliantly interwoven, but we regain for half an hour the affection we held for Dua when we first read that novel. I must re-read it, soon. Excellent.
+ Part Two - On Science Fiction
Many of the pieces in the section 'On Science Fiction' are taken from introductions to the various anthologies that Asimov penned his name to or compiled.
· The Longest Voyage [1983] - 6.27
Brief survey of ways to get to the stars.
· Inventing A Universe [1982] - 6.6
The universe referred to was a template for a series of new stories by new sf authors, created by Asimov with 6 different intelligent civilisations of various physical makeup occupying various appropriate habitable planets about the Milky Way. What is interesting is not the template universe - though it gives pause for thought: consider Banks's different intelligent civs - but the background to 'The Big Three' (Asimov, Heinlein and Clarke) in the sf publishing community at large.
· Invasion [1995] - 6.97
Another introduction to an anthology, Asimov seeds the introduction with Earth's own internal invaders - the Mongols, colonising Europe - to interesting effect.
· The Robot Chronicles [1990] - 7.4
This introduction to Robot Dreams [1986], a summary of the most significant robot short stories and novels, and Asimov's overview of the history of 'robotics', a phrase credited to him in the OED. Having read most of his robot output - only a handful of short stories and essays to go - I have a vested interest in his subject, and an affection, too, for Elijah Bayley and R. Daneel Olivaw. I do not, however, agree that any of his robot stories compete with his Foundation trilogy, as he does.
· The All-Human Galaxy [1983] - 6
How the pan-human galactic empire of the Foundation series came about. Where were all the alien civs?
· Psychohistory [1988] - 7
The origin of the concept of psychohistory and its parallel of v.l.s. behavioural probability to gas/fluid dynamics is the heart of Hari Seldon's new science. It should have been called 'psychosociology', but a couple less syllables is predictably much better, given innate human laziness.
· Science Fiction Series [1986] - 7.27
I didn't know that E.E. ('Doc') Smith was the first to produce a science fiction series with his 3 Skylark and then 5 Lensman novels of 1928 to 1947. Well, I did, from an earlier essay, but Asimov drops it in here in a survey of sf sequels, prequels, trilogies and series.
· Survivors [1987] - 7.3
Asimov lists 9 prolific sf writers still on the go as of 1987. Burn-out in the genre, a reduction of ideas and interests in other genres and modes (mainstream/fiction/non-fiction) and extinction must account for most of the rest. I have rad but 4 of them.
· Nowhere! [1983] - 7.57
One of the most interesting and thought-provoking essays, Nowhere!, is about utopian and dystopian fiction and the balance of the forces of good and evil in fiction based on either or both of these 'good' and 'bad' states. Asimov mentions some examples of each, and roundly damns Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four [1948] as 'abominably poor' (p.270). While disagreeing with him, absolutely, it did throw up a preoccupation of mine: the envy of certain authors who have defined a universe, 'world' or system that will never be bettered, but very often imitated. The most obvious example is Tolkien's The Lord Of The Rings [1954-55], the tale of elves and orcs, hobbits and medieval men, generic species of billions of subsequent fantasy stories (though the hobbits remain unique). Another is Asimov's own Foundation trilogy, of around the same time [1951-53], and his pan-human empire of 23 million habitable planets and psychohistory. Again, there's Frank Herbert's first Dune trilogy [1965-76] and his creditable sociological capitalist-religious 'empire' based (initially) around the CHOAM interstellar corporation (and later upon Muad'Dib). Next, most obvious to me, comes Banks's Culture series, with his smart ships, orbitals and drones, and his sexy Contact and Special Circumstances - not to mention the naming of ships by their Minds. These are the trailblazers, for me.
It seems to me that these people have created worlds with such strongly rooted and widely integral concepts founded each on sound sociological bases that they are inimitable, and are concepts that we may borrow from, but to reuse (or 'reinvent') in some wholesale way would merely be plagiarism, rather than the respected reuse of parts of the canon. But the littoral zone between what may be borrowed from the canon and what would be seen as mere plagiarism is an interesting one. Think of the dozens of concepts borrowable: orcs, elves, the ansible, neutrino message packets, smart minds, hyperspace, FTL. Think of those which could not: hobbits, psychohistory, spice (that spice), Minds, SC... And think of those that wouldn't work: SC intervening on a planet of wayward hobbits. Yet call them some other humanoid term and it's perfectly passable - just outright plagiarism.
This issue plagues me recurrently. But it is really about the envy of what those few invented that could only forever be copied, not manipulated or borrowed as though canon.
· Outsiders, Insiders [1986] - 7.23
A call to arms of the 'band of brothers' (and sisters) that were the privileged group of the Golden Age of sf, who published largely through the magazines, graduated to novels, and only hoped for pieces appearing in the quality press, the bestseller lists and, hope against hope, had films made of their works. They earned their kudos. They didn't just come from medical school and write bestsellers that were made into films...
· Women And Science Fiction [1983] - 4
Not really an exploration; part apology; part introduction. Cherryh, LeGuin, Leckie, are my favourites. LeGuin gets a mention in this. But if any exploration of 'Women and Science Fiction' is to be comprehensive - even in 6 pages - it should surely be devoted more to women sf writers than just editors.
· Time-Travel [1984] - 7.27
In defence of time travel, some basic maths (but significant thought).
+ Part Three - On Writing Science Fiction
· Plotting [1989] - 7.23
Asimov's plots are highly detailed, very balanced and have a solution I can never see. His characters are fairly two-dimensional, usually male, and often, nearly all but one are what-you-see-is-what-you-get. In his best stories, this formula works; in his not so good, what is missing? I think his best stories have good characterisation as well: take Hari Seldon, or Dua, Tritt and Odeen...
· Metaphor [1989] - 7.1
Three metaphors to illustrate a reader's complaint about an inaccurate cover.
· Ideas [1990] - 7.6
In response to the usually awful question to an author, 'Where do you get your ideas from?', Asimov delineates the process of developing ideas and a novel, in this case Nemesis [1989], his latest at the time of writing, to fascinating effect. 'I have a natural aptitude for this sort of thing, and, also, that I have been doing it for over half a century now...' (p.328)
· The Name Of Our Field [1978] - 7.43
An interesting tale of the evolution of the term 'science fiction', with a saucy end to the tale.
· Hints [1979] - 7.17
Sound advice from a writer who made it over 17 years.
· Writing For Young People [1986] - 4.07
One of the few pieces in this collection of 'chats' where I went blank several times, and re-read the same passage several times. It did, however, spin the question about just when 'YA' entered the field technically and universally as a sub-category of literature. Apparently, YA became a sub-category (it is not a genre, it contains many genres, like 'fiction' does) with J.K. Rowling in the late '90s. All I know is that it became a category of dedicated shelves within the last 15-20 years, though I cannot set a precise date. All of this was more interesting than Asimov's piece, though, once again, he is thought-provoking.
· Originality [1986] - 7.2
The origins of the Nightfall short story [1941]. A good yarn.
· Revisions [1982] - 7.4
Instructive and interesting - one of his best. Listen.
· Irony [1984] - 7.7
I've always been useless at irony. My university lecturer - whom I admire, who has an amazing breadth (of subject) - admires it. Asimov proves he's as widely read and can dissimulate between satire and irony. A minor crash course, but an important one.
· Plagiarism [1985] - 7.27
Coincidences do occur, down to similar names of characters. There is only one solution: he who published first has priority, the later one withdraws or radically amends. But borrowing from the canon? In the end, the reader will out.
· Symbolism [1985] - 7.67
A defence of criticism of a published short story in a magazine (most of this section are editorials), Asimov's point of real interest is in his interpretation of the symbolism in The Lord Of The Rings [1954-5]: what does the Ring symbolise?
· Prediction [1989] - 6.93
Not one for blowing his own trumpet, Asimov blows God's.