Forward The Foundation - Isaac Asimov

Forward The Foundation - Isaac Asimov

Isaac Asimov
1993

Well, I finished the Foundation series. This book was tough to get through. It takes place before the events of the first Foundation novel, and after his previous book, Prelude to the Foundation. It focuses on Hari Seldon’s development of the ideas that led to the two Foundations, and Hari’s life on Trantor. This book sealed my new Law of Asimov Quality: The quality of a book written by Isaac Asimov is inversely proportional to the length of the book.

This book was long, and it wasn’t very good. I’ve said before that Asimov doesn’t do character-driven exposition, and this book is no different. Also, it was written in 1193, about 40 years after some of his best work. Overall, I liked the Foundation series, but I would recommend that people only read the original trilogy. I’m looking forward to reading sci-fi that is not about Hari Seldon.

 

Prelude To Foundation - Isaac Asimov

Prelude To Foundation - Isaac Asimov

Isaac Asimov
1988

Much like the last book I reviewed, Foundation And Earth, Prelude To Foundation is a dumptruck-full-of-money book. This book is a prequel to the Foundation series, and I’d like to think it was slightly better than Foundation And Earth.

This book focuses on the great Hari Seldon. Before the book begins, Seldon discovered psychohistory and presented a paper on it at a mathematical conference on Trantor, seat of the Galactic Empire, and now everybody wants him to predict a favorable future for their political faction. The only problem is that Seldon doesn’t believe there is any practical application for his new discovery. He meets with the Emperor, and tells him as much, and is about to head to his home planet when he meets with a journalist, Hummin, who advises that he is in danger due to the Emperor’s henchman, Eto Demerzel. The journalist takes Seldon under his wing, and from then the chase is on. The journalist hides Seldon in a local University and puts him under the watchful eye of Dors Venabili, a history professor at the university. After a scary situation, they are moved from sector to sector in Trantor by the journalist, always staying one half step ahead of Demerzel. It is through these adventures that Seldon learns about Galactic history and the truth of robots and Earth, and begins to have faith in the practicality of psychohistory.

This book has much the same plot structure as Foundation and Earth which I whined so eloquently about, and I won’t repeat it here. I always knew what was about to happen as far as plot twists, which took some of the fun out of the book, and was disappointed at how spineless and pliable the young Hari Seldon was. There was a romantic subplot, and it was handled with much more subtlety than the previous book, but I still wouldn’t call it good.

My verdict? Stick with the original trilogy.

 

Isaac Asimov - Foundation and Earth

Isaac Asimov - Foundation and Earth

Issac Asimov
1982

Foundation and Earth picks up almost immediately after the events of Foundation’s Edge: Foundation councilman Golan Trevize, historian Janov Perolat and their new companion Bliss, head off in search of Earth, a mythical planet where it is suggested that human life originated. They hop from planet to planet, mostly hostile, in search for clues to the location of the planet that most people think does not even exists. That’s really the plot. Eventually, they end up on Earth and we learn what happened to it many millennia before.

This is one of the books that Asimov wrote in exchange for a dump truck full of money, and somehow it feels like he phoned it in. It wasn’t a terrible book by any extent, but at the same point, it didn’t feel like he was trying to add mystery and intrigue to the book. It felt very much like straight line the characters went in to reach Earth.

Also, I think that some time in the 1980s Issac Asimov must learned about sex, because he wrote about it quite a bit in this book. Asimov is good at many things, but should not be writing about sex. It just doesn’t fit his style, or the tone of the previous books in this series.

If you don’t feel like reading 500 pages, here is a re-creation of the book, in under 100 words:

Planet X: No, we don’t know where Earth is, but we do know about Planet A.
Foundationers: Well, let’s go to Planet A.
Planet A: No, we don’t know about Earth, but have you heard about Planets B and C?
Foundationers: Let’s try Planet B.
Planet B: GRRR! WOOF! (it was full of feral dogs)
Foundationers: Eek! Let’s go to Planet C.
Foundationers: (on planet C) hey look, there’s a carving that has the coordinates of 50 worlds. Let’s go to the first one!
Planet D: Let’s have sex! I don’t know what you’re asking us about.
Foundationers: Let’s go look at that star, it’s close to here.
Foundationers: Hey, look it’s Earth. Let’s ask that person over there what’s going on.
Earthman: Welcome to Earth. How may I help you?

Obviously, other stuff happened on the planets they visited, but it mostly felt like filler.

My verdict: Stop with the original trilogy and then read the robot books. I’m going to read the prequels, but only because we already own them.

 

Foundation's Edge - Isaac Asimov

Foundation's Edge - Isaac Asimov

Isaac Asimov
1982

Oh, the Foundation series rears its head again. This one is the fourth book, set about five hundred years into the Foundation era. It was written about 30 years after the original trilogy was published. Asimov himself admitted to writing this book for two reasons: pressure from the fans, and the obsecene amount of money paid to him by the publishers. Apparently, they drove a dump truck full of money up to his front door, or maybe gave him the world’s biggest oversized novelty cheque. Anyways, due to the timeframe and the Scrooge McDuckiness of the whole thing, I was a little wary.

You know when things are going so well that you start thinking that something sinister must be going on that you simply can’t see? That’s the premise of this edition of the Foundation series. Foundation’s Edge continues the epic tale of political inter-planetary intrigue laid out in Foundation, Foundation And Empire and Second Foundation. We saw the Second Foundation “taken down” in the last book, but it turns out they’re not really gone. Things are going swimmingly for both Foundations, following the Seldon Plan so closely that it starts making people in both foundations start to scratch their heads. Officials on both sides send out people to spy on the other, trying to find out what’s really going on. Things come to a head at the planet Gaia, where a big showdown takes place, and everything comes together nicely. What side wins? You’ll have to read the book to find out!

I enjoyed this book. Overall, the book made a lot of sense and the story flowed nicely. There weren’t any huge gaps in logic, and overall I enjoyed the characterizations. Asimov tried to tie any book that took place on Earth or Trantor somehow into the universe of the Foundation, which actually really bothered me. Some of them made sense, but others were only very vaguely tied in and were completely ancillary to the story line. I’m looking forward to Foundation and Earth, which is the next book. Alan’s been reading the books after me and he’s enjoying them as well.

 

Isaac Asimov - Foundation And Empire

Isaac Asimov - Foundation And Empire

Isaac Asimov
1952

Foundation And Empire picks up from the story told in the first Foundation, with the Foundation kicking galaxy periphery ass, and the remains of the old Empire crumbling slowly. This book happens in two distinct parts.

The first half of the book is a narrative about the war between the old Empire and the Foundation. It flows the same sort of way the first book does, though the narrative is more detailed, taking in roughly half the book rather than the 25 to 30 pages that Foundation used in each of its stories. It may not surprise you to find out that due to the inevitable course of psycho-history as predicted by the great Hari Seldon, the Foundation won the war. I guess the slight twist was that this victory was despite the utter failures of the two protagonists, which was rather amusing.

At this point, I was a little wary of starting the second half of the book. The premise of reading more stories where anything a character does has no effect on the eventual outcome was starting to wear a little thin.

The second part of the book takes an about-face with a new mysterious individual that is not accounted for in the Seldon plan: The Mule. It follows a newly married couple, Bayta and Torin, as they harbor The Mule’s runaway clown through the realm of the Foundation. Bayta and Torin witness all of the catastrophes of the war, including the fall of the Foundation’s home planet, the fall of Torin’s home planet, and the eventual spread of The Mule’s influence all the way to the center of the galaxy, Trantor. Bayta and Torin realize that in order to save the galaxy, they must contact the only group they think capable of stopping The Mule: The Second Foundation.

This second tale is a lot more riveting than the first. For the first time you see people reacting out of emotional motivations rather than blind ambition, and it is a nice change. I saw the big reveal at the end of the book coming from a long way off, but it was satisfying when it came. My favorite character, Bayta, was multi-dimensional and a strong woman.

Overall, I would absolutely recommend this book to others. I am looking forward to the next book, Second Foundation

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