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An encyclopedia in which everything in the world revolves around the Good Doctor.
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Books written by Asimov |
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Essays written by Asimov |
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Asimov biographical data |
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Asimovian science index |
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People, place and things in Asimov's world |
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| Galaxies
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Asimov's twelfth published book on astronomy, published by Follett in 1968. For yunger readers. |
| Galileo |
Namechecked by Asimov in:
"The Tragedy of the Moon," F & SF, July 1972. (Anthologized in The Tragedy of the Moon, 1973.
Referred to by Asimov in:
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| Ginn Science Program - Advanced Level A and B [2 books]
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Ginn and Co., two books in the series, published 1973.
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| Ginn Science Program - Intermediate Leval A, B and C [3 books]
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Ginn and Co., three books in the series, published 1972.
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| The Gods Themselves
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Asimov's fourteenth published science fiction novel, Doubleday, 1972.
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| Good Taste
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Science fiction anthology published by Apocalypse, 1976.
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| Graham, Beardsley |
Mentioned by Asimov in his introduction to The Tragedy of the Moon (1973), as "[the man] who gave the talk on TV casettes that inspired mine."
Asimov was referring to events in his essay, "The Ancient and the Ultimate" in which he attended a week of seminaars held at the Institute of Man and Science in Rennselaerville, NY. "He made out an attractive, and, to my way of thinking, irrefutable case in favor of the casettes as representing the communication wave of the future-or, anyway, one of the waves."
Asimov was not supposed to speak, but when the seminar's final speaker was unable to appear, he stepped in and gave a speech inspired by Graham's. He also turned that speech into "The Ancient and the Ultimate." |
| Great Ideas of Science: The Men and the Thinking Behind Them
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A science book written by children, published by Doubleday in 1969.
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| Greeks, the |
Namechecked by Asimov in:
"The Triumph of the Moon," June 1973 |
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