I recently finished these 2 books, dating back to the end of last month:
I will admit that I am not a highly science-minded individual. My understanding of many of the concepts explored in this book borders on total ignorance. Regardless of these factors, I immensely enjoyed this strange tale, which tickled my brain with its themes of human ambition, ego, and the desire for personal glory regardless of the potential cost; in this case, the potential explosion of Earth's sun. Split up into three sections, the book spans Earth, an alien parallel universe, and the colonized moon. The second section in particular is noteworthy. Asimov creates a brand new universe, with a society that is wonderfully imagined; one where beings mate in triads, and feast off pure energy. Whereas it may have sounded ridiculous in the hands of a different author, Asimov fully buys into this alien world, making us believe in it, and care about its odd inhabitants. From what I have read of Asimov so far, this story features some of his strongest prose. Despite its heavy use of scientific theories and terms, this can still be enjoyed by anyone who likes reading about possible futures, with a healthy dose of relevant philosophy. "Against stupidity, the gods themselves contend in vain."
This is a brisk 150 page sci-fi adventure that is ultimately flawed due to its brevity. Anderson introduces a load of various races and languages, but does not spend a lot of time on each, making the reader confused as to what exactly is going on from time to time. Also, humanity has apparently achieved immortality, but Anderson spends no time explaining how this happened. In short, while the clash of civilizations that Anderson tries to pull off here is a classic idea, the execution lacks substance. The book comes off half-baked, which is a shame, because with some extra care and extrapolation of themes, this could have been something special.
I started this last weekend and have slowly been chipping away at it...
The title is fairly self-explanatory. It is very accessible and written in a language anyone can pick up and understand. The prose writing is actually rather simplistic, but it helps to understand the philosophic theories that much more. This book starts from myths, and works its way up through the Socrates, Marx, and just about every other significant philosopher in Western thought.
After I get through this, I will be reading these two...
I have read great things, and just browsing the summary whets my appetite for some excellent science fiction.
I figure it's about time for me to dip into this man's work. I picked this up based on GAF's recommendation. I don't think you guys will let me down, will you?!