| Authors | Title | Series | Description | Format |
|---|
| Isaac Asimov | Prelude to Foundation | Foundation | | Hardcover |
| Isaac Asimov | Adding a Dimension: A Scintillating, Mind-opening Excursion Through the Realms of Science | | | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | Pebble in the Sky | | | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | I, Robot | | | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | The Foundation Trilogy: Foundation, Second Foundation, Foundation and Empire | Foundation | | Trade Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | Foundation’s Edge | Foundation | | Hardcover |
| Isaac Asimov | Naked Sun (Robot) | | The electrifying sequel to Caves of Steel in which Elijah Baley is once more teemed up with R. Daneel. The two must travel to Solaria, where no human has gone in over a thousand years! Reacting in fear against the technological superiority of the Outer Worlds, the people of Earth have hidden themselves in vast underground cities, nursing a hatred for Spacers. The fifty Outer Worlds of the Spacers together are home to fewer people than planet Earth. And home to many, many more robots. Earthmen hate Spacer robots, too...But Baley doesn't. He once had a robot partner, R. Daneel- and when the authorities of the planet Solaria request terrestrial assistance in investigating a murder, Baley is once again teamed with Daneel. He is the first Earthman in a millennium to travel to the Outer Worlds...and he must endure the glare of a sun far more deadly than Earth's. | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | Martian Way | | | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | The Currents Of Space | | | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | The Robots of Dawn | | | Hardcover |
| Isaac Asimov | The Bicentennial Man and Other Stories | | 'He never falls below a certain level of excellence...a highly appetising read' -- MARTIN AMIS, OBSERVER --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. | Hardcover |
| Isaac Asimov | The Stars, Like Dust | | | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | Nemesis | | When Eugenia Insigna of the Settlement Rotor, an independent space station, discovers an unknown red dwarf star two light years from Earth, she names it Nemesis. Led by Dr. Janus Pitt, Rotor and its population travel to the star to build a new, morally pure society. Insigna's daughter Marlene, who can read body language like a telepath, learns that Nemesis is moving dangerously close to Earth's solar system. After trying to communicate her knowledge, Marlene discovers that a conspiracy is suppressing it. Told alternately from two points of view, Marlene's and (in a different time frame) her father's, the book is repetitive, talky and unengaging. Asimov is at his best when his characters discuss science and their schemes for saving Earth's people from destruction by Nemesis.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | Fantastic Voyage | | Based on the Screenplay By Harry Kleiner, from the original story by Otto Klement and Jay Lewis Bixby. | Hardcover |
| Isaac Asimov | Of Time and Space and Other Things. | | | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov, Robert Silverberg | Nightfall | | This collaboration by two masters of the genre expands on Asimov's classic short story first published in 1941. Kalgash is a planet with six suns, a world where darkness is unnatural. Scientists realize that an eclipse--an event that occurs only every 2049 years--is imminent, and that a society completely unfamiliar with darkness will be plunged into madness and chaos. The novel traces events leading to this discovery, and the fates of the main characters immediately following the apocalypse. While the premise is convincing in the context of a short story, this longer version brings up too many unresolved questions. The original tale was tightly written, succinct and stunning, but the novelization seems flabby and drawn-out--the reader recognizes the significance and consequences of the impending events long before the characters do. An abrupt and simplistic ending further mars a hallowed SF tale. 100,000 first printing.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov | Fantastic Voyage II: Destination Brain | | Twenty-one years ago when the movie Fantastic Voyage was released, Asimov was hired to do the novelization. The book was successful but, to Asimov, not satisfying, for "I never felt it to be entirely mine." Now he has rewritten it his way, and it's good. The story concerns Albert Jonas Morrison, a 21st century neurophysicist, and otherwise an ordinary and unheroic man, who is kidnapped and taken to the Soviet Union. A major Soviet scientist, Pyotr Shapirov, is in an irreversible coma, and Morrison's special expertise could be of value. The Soviets believe that Morrison may be able to apply his controversial theories to retrieve vagrant thoughts that still may be floating in Shapirov's damaged brain and so provide clues to important work in which Shapirov was engaged. Morrison goes cold with fear because the plan calls for him to be miniaturizedalong with four Soviet scientiststo sub-molecular size, introducing them into Shapirov's body and, ultimately, into his brain. The snappish relationships between the scientists is wryly depicted, and the mission itself makes fascinating reading as both an actionadventure and an intellectually stimulating premise. BOMC featured selection.
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov (ed.), Martin Greenberg (ed.), Charles G. Waugh (ed.) | Witches (Isaac Asimov's Magical Worlds of Fantasy #2) | Isaac Asimov's Magical Worlds of Fantasy | | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov (ed.), Barry B. Longyear, George R. R. Martin | The Hugo Winners, Volume 5 (1980 - 1982) | | This anthology contains a number of fine storiesvirtually a given with a volume of Hugo winners. Included are the honored tales from 1980, '81 and '82, among them twoeach by Gordon R. Dickson and George R. R. Martin, and one each by Barry Longyear, Clifford D. Simak, Poul Anderson, Roger Zelazny and John Varley, all (with the exception of Longyear) Hugo winners in previous years as well. Particularly fine are Varley's little shocker "The Pusher," which considers the dilemma of the astronaut, who ages slowy during space travel, in creating a long-term relationship with an Earth-bound lover; Longyear's "Enemy Mine" (recently made into a film), which casts an Earthman and an alien into a hostile environment and traces their relationship from antagonism through mutual dependence, friendship and love; and Martin's spectacularly effective horror story about a sadistic man whose otherworldly insect-like pets escape from their tank and turn his home into a charnel house.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc. | Hardcover |
| Isaac Asimov (ed.) | The Hugo Winners Volumes One and Two | | | Hardcover |
| Isaac Asimov (ed.), Patricia S. Warrick (ed.), Martin Harry Greenberg (ed.) | Machines That Think: The Best Science Fiction Stories About Robots and Computers | | | Hardcover |
| Isaac Asimov (ed.), Roger Zelazny, Larry Niven, Fritz Lieber, James Tiptree Jr. | The Hugo Winners, Volume 4 (1976 - 1979) | | | Hardcover |
| Isaac Asimov (ed.), Martin H. Greenberg (ed.), Charles G. Waugh (ed.) | Flying Saucers | | | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov (ed.) | The New Hugo Winners, Vol. 2 | | YA-- An engrossing collection of short stories, novellas, and novelettes that have been recipients of the Hugo Award between 1986-1988. Students seeking prehistory with a modern twist should delight in Robert Silverberg's ``Gilgamesh in the Outback,'' charactered by heroes of old and engaged in the never-ending quest for permanent friendship. Frederik Pohl offers science-fiction fans a choice of endings for his post-holocaust survival story. Although each selection involves interaction with other worlds, their premises differ. This is a thought-provoking anthology that would make an excellent read-aloud and a fine introduction to fiction, science fiction, and fantasy. The appendix includes all of the Hugo winners between 1953-1991.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc. | Paperback |
| Isaac Asimov (ed.), Martin H. Greenberg (ed.) | The Great SF Stories: 6 (1944) | | | Paperback |