The first 4 in the series.
My 3 Brazilian editions of the Foundation books. I plan to buy a box set with all books in the series.
My 3 Brazilian editions of the Foundation books. I plan to buy a box set with all books in the series.
My first Asimov experience, it's easy to understand why he's a classic scifi pillar. I like the broad sociological sweeps captured by the arcs of individual characters. Shout out to Finn for graciously volunteering as my photo background.
Be sure to not allow a lot of days to pass between readings! Book is essentially a collection of intimate scenes (separated by decades) detailing galactic imperial decline and power machinations along a fatalistic timeline predicted by a genius mathematician and "psychohistorian". Where does fate end, and chance begin? From where does power truly derive? And what is the relationship of prediction to predetermination?
"I wanted to be a psychological engineer, but we lacked the facilities, so I did the next best thing - I went into politics. It's practically the same thing."
My son is really into sci-fi and is reading all the classics. So I decided to read a few myself. This book wasn‘t what I expected. At first I didn‘t like it, but as it progressed I started to enjoy it more and now, I keeps thinking about it. So I am giving it a thumbs up.
Our episode on Asimov's Foundation is finally out! We discuss the Sci-Fi classic and its impact on the genre, whether or not we liked it (yes, it was very entertaining), the possibility of using psychohistory to predict real-world events, and we try to figure out what “vegan tobacco“ is. Enjoy!
https://anchor.fm/peter-murphy8/episodes/Episode-82-Foundation-e1dprio
During the last few days of #JoyousJanuary, I'll be reading the picks for #Roll100. I should make good progress on Sunday when I do my official unplug (no tv, computer and phone). @Andrew65 @PuddleJumper
I listened to this for two reasons:
1. It‘s a #1001Books selection, and
2. I kinda want to watch the show, and have that read-first rule.
I did like the basic premise—a great, advanced society receding into a dark age after the fall of an empire, and a forward-thinking plan to lessen the length of that dark age—the time jumps and one-dimensional characters made it hard to engage… maybe I will watch, but I won‘t continue the books.
⭐️⭐️⭐️
While it‘s super dated (are there actually any women in the future?), I‘m enjoying the first Foundation book more than I figured I would.
But this is literally all I think if every time Prince Regent Wienis is mentioned. 😂
#TBR 2: While I am super excited about all my holiday reads that I have been meaning to read for a while, I am also very excited (and maybe most excited) to tackle Foundation with a friend. It has been on my bookshelf for a long long time. #WinterGames #TeamSleighers @StayCurious
This was not as good as I expected it to be, it was long-winded and boring for me personally.
The characters are dull and boring characters because the author doesn't spend much time developing them and that's what kills it for me; I like good, memorable characters.
I'm aware I'm in the minority here, the majority rate it highly but I find it dated.
Started the Foundation trilogy and I found it helped to learn it was initially a set of short stories and that Asimov wrote these to make some money when he was only 21 (!!). Asimov imagines what it would have been like for the fall of the Roman Empire to have been predicted, what would people have done.
Thanks for the tag @DarkMina 🙋♂️
1️⃣ I'm currently reading Foundation by Isaac Asimov 🚀
2️⃣ We're taking the kids trick or treating and we'll most likely watch sonething like the new Hotel Transylvania. 🧛♂️
3️⃣ The health and wellbeing of my family. 🖤
I tag @Ast_Arslan 🙋♂️
#WondrousWednesday @Eggs
I may like the idea of this book more than the reality of it. My teenage self set my Goodreads URL to /psychohistory, as I was fascinated by that fictional branch of mathematics which sets these stories in motion. On this reread, Asimov‘s predicted decline of the galactic empire by stagnation of investment in science felt more possible than ever, yet for every spark of my interest there was an equally deep waning as we skipped across time.
🌟 Yea I can‘t. I totally get this a classic and people looooove this series. It just isn‘t for me. I love science fiction but this was a totally slog fest for me. Why am I still reading this when I almost a week ago. It‘s short, and yet I‘m still 3 hours away from being done.
I‘ll try the series instead. I got the gist of it.
Hari Seldom,a psychohistorian whose job is to predict the future of the galaxy,predicts the fall of the Empire and manipulates the government into send him and other scientists to an empty planet in the periphery.There stablishes a colony of scientists, the Foundation, mapping up the next centuries with the aim of getting the Foundation as the new ruler.An interesting read,but it feels like is setting the pieces for a bigger story that's to come
It was good to read this again, though it is hopelessly androcentric, with the single named female character being a '50s stereotype and nought but a cipher, but that quibble aside, it's an interesting future history that was, and is, a satirical commentary on contemporary society. Many of Asimov's ideas having become genre tropes & entered the mainstream through media such as (particularly) Star Wars is a testament to the strength of his vision.
End of empire; religion cynically used to control and incite the masses; the undermining of science and critical thinking; political cults of personality; fake news.
Move along, please. Nothing to see here. Keep it moving!
I last read the Foundation trilogy in 1975. I wasn't sure how it would stack up now, and while it may be a bit early to commit to a definite position as I'm only on page 20, I'm loving it so far! 😀🚀
This was interesting but also disappointing in that it continually left me expecting more. I never minded reading it and was intrigued by the details of each section. Yet, each short episode of history never provided enough depth of world building or character development. The abrupt ending felt unsatisfying without making me feel any real need to know how the society would move forward next.
#1001books
#Reading1001 #TBRTakedown August 2020
I forgot how much I love this book! The writing is good, the characters fun, and the fi is very sci. I‘m going to have to get into the rest of the series again at some point.
#LLReadathon
“Hardin‘s expression became that of a man counting to ten, mentally.”
It‘s nice to be reading these again after so many years.
#LLReadathon
So I‘d only intended to buy The Little Blue Kite and In the Dream House while I was out book shopping... but then I found this while I was browsing. It is a book I want to read, but I‘d planned on just borrowing it from the library... but that cover though. 😍 My boyfriend also shared my #coverlove so I ended up bringing this one home too.
Great book. Truly ahead of its time, with so many parallels to life and society today. For some reason, it took me awhile to get through it, but I loved it all the same. Is it worth carrying on with the rest of the series?
Man, I really love classic sci-fi. The interconnected short stories tell the fall of a stagnant galactic empire and the rise of Foundation, a small world which uses its science, religion, and traders to navigate relationships with it‘s more dangerous neighbors. Asimov can eerily predict ideas and societal movements. This one truly deserves its place as one of the cornerstones of science fiction.
Heh. If I had to sum up how I live my life at work, it would be waiting in quiet serenity and utter faith in a deus ex machina to pop up and save my butt.
“Mr. Advocate, the rotten tree-trunk, until the very moment when the storm-blast breaks it in two, has all the appearance of might it ever had. The storm-blast whistles through the branches of the Empire even now. Listen with the ears of psychohistory, and you will hear the creaking.”
#LilithJuly | 15: #Foundations
📷: Made with Typorama
Foundation is a well readable story, but it is not the big deal it is cracked up to be. There are interesting themes: civilizations fall when scientific curiosity stalls, when authoritariasm wins. Religion, technology and trade are examined as means of political power. However, the writing is mediocre, the story is a series of shorts, there is zero character development, and zero women. The science is stuck in 1951. Disappointing. ⭐️⭐️⭐️
What an odd little book...halfway through I thought it‘s a great encapsulation of the cycles human civilization seems destined to pass through & I can see why it was popular, BUT I‘m not sure if I want to read the sequels. However the end leaves you mid-story and the idea that it‘s almost impossible to overcome the inertia of society without lots of people or time is a bit chilling since it rings true and our inertia is so bad at the moment.
When Asimov wants it clear this is going to be the bad advisor to the underage king. 🤪🤦♀️😂
I‘m not sure if this would be a pick if I hadn‘t read the two books in the series that occur before Foundation (which were written much later). There are basically five different stories that take place in the same “world” and there‘s not enough time spent with the characters for me to be really drawn in. I‘ll have to see how this book fits into Asimov‘s scheme.
Audiobooking it so we can celebrate Lola Petunia‘s 13th birthday with our traditional rotisserie chicken. It‘s even funnier hearing the narrator say #wienis repeatedly. #pugsoflitsy
Am I the only one who giggles every time they hear the name WIENIS? This chapter has me in hysterics. #nevergrowup
Drinking my $5 cold brew and reading while waiting for a haircut at the only place in my neighborhood that charges less than $100. Fingers crossed that I don‘t end up with a mullet.
Time for another classic Science Fiction fix, with the first published book in the Foundation series - this one was published in 1951! Pretty sure I read this around 25 - 30 years ago.
I‘m very happy I start late in the morning - nothing is better than a cup of coffee and a good book in bed 😊 come join us on reddit (r/bookclub) this month! We‘re reading this fantastic and seminal classic by Asimov!
I know that all SFF writers write from their own situation in time and place, but they speculate on social structures as well as technology. And it's a bit disappointing to see that tens of thousands of years from now humanity has a social structure where men work and women are simply classified as wives. (And they're not using the metric system either!)
Book. Train. Welsh countryside. Let the weekend commence!
#ReadingRetreat
@jhod @squirrelbrain @Mitch @julesG @scripturient @RachelO @Oryx @eraderneely
The Empire is failing and a leading psycho historian knows the galaxy will fall into millennia of brutality and dark ages - so he sets up a scientific community (the Foundation) on the perimeter of human exploration to become the seeds for a new enlightened empire. This book is told in sections - each section a new epoch after the end of Empire - each with new characters facing a new crisis foretold by their progenitor ⬇️
I say pick but mostly out of respect for Asimov and his legacy. The story was good, even if made almost entirely out of dialogue. In the entire book, however, there was one female character, and she was kind of a bitch. So... Yay cool story. But it's quite obvious this was written before women were seen as intellectual equals.
I'm still learning how to use Litsy. I followed a ton of suggested members last night and a lot of you followed me back. Thank you! I decided to join Litsy so that ideas and thoughts could be shared regarding the books we love. Here's a little bit about me.
1. Sci-fi
2. Claustrophobia (not so much small spaces as low spaces)
3. Veterinarian
4. 70°
5. Hey!
And thanks @howjessreads
Another cool cover. My husband got this book from his aunt waaaaaaaaaaaay back in the day at which time it cost $2.50.
I‘m not going to finish this. I just don‘t care about all these dudes and their galactic power struggles. I know that this book was first published in 1951, and I have to look at it through the messed-up backward lens of time, but I don‘t have an interest in a world set 40,000 years in the future where the women are still the unnamed secretaries to the men who are running the universe.
@Moray_Reads congratulations on this amazing milestone! And thanks for the giveaway. My choice is the tagged book. My husband urged me to read it shortly after we got married. I‘d never read any sci-fi, or anything remotely like this. It taught me that I could and should read outside my comfort zone. Litsy has reinforced that idea. There are a lot of things on my TBR that I would not have considered without all of you. #bookschangelivesgiveaway
I am traveling to my hometown for the festival. My train is having a halt and I just completed this book in middle of the night.
Here are some of my thoughts on this.
Liked it. The narrative has many timeskips. Each generation of "The Foundation" faces diffe
rent crisis and each generation handles it differently. From pseudo religion to trade control. Definitely reading the next one.