09-29-2021, 09:38 AM | #31 |
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09-29-2021, 10:17 AM | #32 |
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I liked it, but I agree few things happen. It's one of those "sense of wonder" books with a huge alien structure. There's been a lot of literature, TV shows and movies along those lines since then, which has dulled our ability to feel that wonder.
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09-29-2021, 10:26 AM | #33 |
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Coming back to Asimov, I'm a big fan. I started reading SF with his works, and I loved all of them. It's been a long time since then, and old SF doesn't age as well as other genres, but I still love it.
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09-29-2021, 08:58 PM | #34 | |
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09-29-2021, 09:03 PM | #35 | |
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Surprised you didn't like the short stories. I suggest you read The Songs of Distant Earth (the short story). I read it only recently. It showcases his skills. |
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09-29-2021, 10:12 PM | #36 |
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I don't recall mentioning short stories on this thread - or maybe you infer dislike from their absence here? I think short stories is/was where Science Fiction often shines - it lets authors wrap their neat ideas in minimal story and (often) get away with it. Both Clarke and Asimov had some truly great short stories, but Asimov was the one I where I ended up buying my own copies of various collections. But I don't tend to revisit the shorts very often.
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09-29-2021, 10:15 PM | #37 |
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09-30-2021, 07:53 AM | #38 |
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09-30-2021, 09:23 AM | #39 |
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I agree it's a sense of wonder book, and it is done exceedingly well. One can argue not a lot happens. I disagree. What happens is the exploration of the mystery of the object. And Clarke describes and evokes that wonder so well. I wonder if that was Clarke was truly a master of--describing wonder, eternity, mortality, the tininess of humans in the face of it. His title of first novel length work Against the Fall of Night quotes a poem that describes that sentiment. Clarke was probably the best at this since Hodgson in the Nightland. It's a thread that runs through all his best work.
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09-30-2021, 09:23 AM | #40 |
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I skimmed through the start. It looks dreadful.
The adaption of Childshood End was not bad. It kind of went off, and added new stuff early on, but I feel it did a lot of what it did well. But Foundation looks dreadful. |
09-30-2021, 10:14 AM | #41 |
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Yes. One of my all-time favorite books, The City and the Stars, is also one of the best epitomes of that sense of wonder I've ever read. Granted, I've only read the Estonian translation of it, but I still remember the awe I felt when I first read it in my early teens. (The Soviet-era translations (of mostly any book) were excellent, as a rule. I've never felt the need to read the original with most of them. Not so with later translations, where I prefer the originals if they're in English).
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09-30-2021, 06:28 PM | #42 |
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One of the problems is that Science itself advances so that what was once known fact can change. Edmund Hamilton's "The City at World's end" is an example. Knowledge about how stars age and their life cycle changed after he wrote it so that it doesn't work in that regard anymore. It's still a good story though.
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10-01-2021, 12:50 PM | #43 | |
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I will add that Clarke writes particularly beautiful prose. Against the fall of night is shorter, and just as good as the city and the stars. It's worth reading just for the opening scene. Apparently the opening scene was what spawned both books. It appeared in his mind all by itself with great power, and he wrote it down immediately. Last edited by Pajamaman; 10-01-2021 at 12:54 PM. |
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10-01-2021, 12:51 PM | #44 | |
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10-01-2021, 12:57 PM | #45 | |
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