Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
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September/October 1989 | Volume 40, Issue 6
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
September/October 1989 | Volume 40, Issue 6
I would not know how to make a list of ‘The Twelve Best Science-Fiction Novels of All Time.” The stories I like best are so frequently totally unlike each other that it is unfair to try to measure them on the same scale. Instead, here is simply a list of the science-fiction novels that I loved most at first reading, have reread quite recently, and still love.
The Time Machine by H. G. Wells, 1895 (New American Library, 1984) . Or, indeed, almost anything by Wells, who was the first writer to make humanly plausible excursions into worlds and times wholly unlike our own arid to do it with unfailing grace.
The Skylark of Space by Edward E. Smith, Ph.D., 1928 (Berkeley Publishing Group, 1985) . The first and best writer of space opera, with his first pioneering work. It is not a masterpiece of English prose, but oh how the interstellar adventures of its hero, Richard Seaton, thrilled me with their celebration of science and technology— and still do.
The World Below by S. Fowler Wright, 1929 (Hyperion Press, 1976) . Wright was a highly prolific author in England, but relatively few of his works appeared in this country. His best, I think, is this exploration of the far future of Earth, when the human race has died off and been replaced with strange, wonderful, and sometimes terrifying creatures out of a dream—or nightmare.
The Gods Themselves by Isaac Asimov, 1978 (Ballantine Books, 1988) . It isn’t easy for me to choose a single novel out of the works of Isaac Asimov, not only because there are so many of them but also because he and I have been close friends since before either of us had published anything at all. I have long lost the ability to be objective. But The Gods Themselves is the book that pleased me most when I first read it, and its pleasure has not diminished.
Last and First Men by W. Olaf Stapledon, 1930 (Dover Publications) . Another English writer, not as well known as he should be in this country; but this is a magnificent, ground-breaking book. It is nothing less than a complete future history of the human race, extending through the next several billion years.
Lest Darkness Fall by L. Sprague de Camp, 1941 (Ballantine, 1979) . This wonderful story is about a man who is hurled back in time to the decaying Roman Empire, just before the Dark Ages, and takes it upon himself to prevent them from happening. It is a special favorite for many reasons —not least because it demonstrates so well that science fiction does not have to be about space travel or the future.
The City and