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What;s Flying Ace?
Asimov lived for many years in Newton, Mass., a suburb of Boston not convenient to any univesity library -- he was allowed to use the Professor at Boston University title forever even though he only taught there for a year or two but apparently this didn't include any of the rights or privileges of the position. When he moved to New York, they lived in one of those fabulous Upper West Side apartment houses. On Jul 17, 9:14*am, The DixieFlatline wrote: Biggles was a Flying Ace type. Hugh Walters wrote basically the same sort of thig, but set in space, and to be honest I can't remember a single plot, but I loved 'em at the time. The SSR was a Harry Harrison series of novels, since "sequalled" to death andDoc Smith's lensmen is definitley only readable until about the age of 15, tops, even if they're not actually classed as juveniles. Banks is sort of space-opera for adults, galactic in scope but without all the empire and blue-jawed heroics. He's written some good none-genre novels as well, under the same name but minus the middle initial. I seem to remember reading somewhere that Asimov had a near eidic memory and was a very fast reader. Yep! Both were English, Eric Frank Russel, too; another oft passed-over great. It's odd, I can think of English, Scottish and Irish SF writers, but no Welsh. "Peter T. Daniels" wrote: Nothing wrong with incomplete sentences. I don't know who Biggles, Walters, Stainless Steel Rat, or Banks are. I don't think I read (though I did buy) Asimov's last two or three novels. I had already discovered that he is unrereadable -- he provided story, not style -- and his ego and sexism the several times I met him or saw him on TV were awfully offputting. I did ask him why he had never written anything on linguistics (my field), and he did say he had to know something about a topic before he wrote about it ... and I always regretted that I didn't think of asking how he kept up on current research in his fields (since he was notoriously reclusive). He went to P D Q Bach concerts and G & S Society meetings, and to SF conventions if they didn't require flying. Is Lensmen the Doc Smith series? I did try him once, because Asimov said he was so important, but he was more like Agatha Christie: didn't play fair with the reader. Isn't John Brunner English also? And John Wyndham. On Jul 17, 6:46 am, The DixieFlatline wrote: *I meant to mention ... If you stopped reading SF when Heinein went odd, you've missed all of Iain M Banks' work. It *might tempt you back ... (Incomplete sentences, a habit I picked up from Arthur C Clarke ...)- |
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