Editors Reads
Science Fiction

Isaac Asimov

American · b. 1920

5 books reviewed Avg rating 4.4 / 5Top rating 4.6 / 5

Hugo Award (multiple), Nebula Award, multiple lifetime achievement honors

Russian-American science fiction grandmaster whose Foundation series and robot stories helped define the genre's intellectual ambitions and remain foundational texts today.

Isaac Asimov was one of the most prolific and influential science fiction writers of the twentieth century, producing over five hundred books across science fiction, popular science, and literary criticism. His Foundation series — beginning with the novels collected in Foundation — imagines a mathematician who predicts the fall of a galactic empire and works to shorten the ensuing dark age. It is one of the most ambitious thought experiments in genre fiction: a meditation on history, free will, and the limits of prediction that draws directly on Edward Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.

I, Robot collects Asimov’s early robot stories and introduces the Three Laws of Robotics, a framework that has shaped how people think and write about artificial intelligence for seven decades. The stories are puzzle-driven and cerebral — Asimov uses his robots as philosophical instruments more than emotional characters — and they reward readers who enjoy ideas more than atmosphere. Critics have noted that his prose is functional rather than beautiful and that his characters, particularly women, are often thinly drawn by contemporary standards.

Asimov’s great strength was the quality of his thinking. He wrote to illuminate ideas, and the ideas in Foundation and I, Robot are genuinely big: the tractability of the future, the ethics of programming minds, the relationship between individual agency and social forces. These books remain worth reading not as period pieces but as living intellectual arguments.

5 Books Reviewed

Foundation book cover
Editor's Pick

Foundation

by Isaac Asimov

4.6

The first book in Asimov's groundbreaking Foundation series, in which mathematician Hari Seldon predicts the fall of a galactic empire and sets in motion a thousand-year plan to preserve civilisation.

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I, Robot book cover
Editor's Pick

I, Robot

by Isaac Asimov

4.5

Isaac Asimov's linked short story collection introducing the Three Laws of Robotics and exploring their logical implications in a series of increasingly complex scenarios.

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Foundation and Empire book cover

Foundation and Empire

by Isaac Asimov

4.4

The Foundation has survived its first two centuries through Hari Seldon's psychohistory — until the Mule arrives. A mutant of immeasurable mental power, the Mule is the one event psychohistory could not predict, and his conquest of the Foundation threatens to collapse thousands of years of carefully planned history into chaos.

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Second Foundation book cover

Second Foundation

by Isaac Asimov

4.4

After the Mule's defeat, the galaxy is preoccupied with finding the mysterious Second Foundation — whose existence could either save or undermine the First Foundation's plan. Two storylines unfold: the Mule's search, and then the First Foundation's own search years later. The location of the Second Foundation is the central mystery of the original trilogy.

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The Caves of Steel book cover

The Caves of Steel

by Isaac Asimov

4.3

New York City in the far future is a vast enclosed city of eight million people who rarely venture outside. Detective Elijah Baley is assigned to investigate a murder at a Spacer enclave — and is given a robot partner named R. Daneel Olivaw. Asimov's fusion of science fiction and classic detective fiction, set in one of his most vividly imagined futures.

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