pling
2/23/2014
The Golden Age of Science Fiction is a phrase that commonly has two definitions - the first of these is the era when Campbell was editing Astounding Stories and the writers included people like Isaac Asimov. The other definition is that the golden age of science fiction is 12. That the stories that you read around that sort of age when you're just discovering your own tastes in fiction are the ones that stick with you through your life. This anthology is a selection of stories that Isaac Asimov remembers reading in the 1930s - in his own personal golden age - that had an influence on his writing and thus on "The Golden Age".
As an aside, I'm not sure I quite agree with either definition - both that those 1940s stories of The Golden Age aren't (in large part because of my own age) going to be the best thing ever for me. And also that I think I'm still discovering new books & stories I think are as good or better than the things I read in my teens.
But still, as a conceit for an anthology it's a good one, and as well as reprinting the stories Asimov writes about his own life. He comes across as very full of himself, but also aware of that and poking fun at his own ego. I suspect if I'd ever met him I'd've found him irritatingly smug, but the tone works OK in an autobiography.
Click the link below for my full review.
http://ninecats.org/margaret/blog/2013/01/28/golden-age-1-ed-isaac-asimov