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#1 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Seoul, South Korea
Posts: 602
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My heart almost stopped at this topic. Tolkien, good Eru grief, liked Asimov? Asimov. And Tolkien. Since I've grown out of childhood tales, my whole literary life has revolved around those two authors. They are so different, yet same. Asimov, in his refreshing brevity and quick-paced narrative, Tolkien with his fantastic descriptions and gentle flow - Asimov, his imagination reaching into the future, Tolkien, placing emphasis on bloodlines and histories and building a world of the past, the flowing years from the sea - yet, pick them apart bit by bit, and there is one fascinating similarity about their works, which is _____...
Well, the answer to the blank must be different to all. I leave it open. PS. Why do people neglect his ROBOT NOVEL series? I think they're the best of the lot, although this is just my opinion. I recommend the following (with + to the specially good, - to the not so good): Foundation, Foundation and Empire(+), Foundation's Edge(-), Foundation's End, Prelude to Foundation(+), Forward the Foundation(-), Caves of Steel(+), Robots of Dawn(+), The Naked Sun, Second Foundation, I Robot, Nemesis, and the various other non-fictions of his are just as good.
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Last edited by Eorl of Rohan; 10-11-2005 at 12:37 AM. |
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#2 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: commonplace city
Posts: 518
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Wow I thought I was all alone with these two favorite authors of mine...
Thinking about commonalities of the authors, for me it's a "purest" angle. While there have been great ones over all decades, my take on SF is that the best stuff was written in the mid 20th century. "Classic" SF as it were... whats appealing to me is that the vision of the future, while relfecting some of the nuclear drama of the time, is more forthright. Less encumbered by techno babble and futurist speak. There is a real feeling of vision of the future IMO. Real people in a real obtainable future. Likewise, I (purest again) feel that the best fantasy fiction was - well - Tolkien and RE Howard. All written in mid 20th century again. History was (to me) more alive during this pre-technological age to us as a culture. Asimov was as grounded as a Humanist, as Tolkien was grounded as a Catholic, and both used that foundation in their writings. For the body of works - well the pattern was the same in both authors. Tolkien had his legendarium, where the attempt to fit the pieces together was made to incorporate the body of work as a whole. Asimov had his Foundation novels, which was a microcosm in itself, but the Empire novels, Robot novels, most of his short stories, all fit, or had a natural place in his "legendarium". In his novel "The End of Eternity", he even explains why, in his future, mankind is the only intelligent space faring species around. |
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#3 |
Itinerant Songster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: The Edge of Faerie
Posts: 7,066
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Thanks for the intriguing responses.
I should mention that I ran across an article in Mythlore magazine (dedicated to the creative work of Tolkien, Lewis, Charles Williams, and other Inklings) in which Tolkien and Lewis's interest in the current sci fi of their own time (30s/40s) got them to thinking about writing time travel and space travel stories of their own. So for Tolkien it was a longstanding love affair, as it were. It's also interesting that in that Letter I mentioned above, Tolkien said that he pretty much avoided fantasy of the 60s as pretty bad stuff, but liked sci fi. What does that tell you? |
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#4 | |
Dead Serious
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I can't speak for Tolkien, but personally speaking, I am a lot more tolerant of poorer Sci-Fi than I am of poor "fantasy". Perhaps Tolkien is to blame. My first fantasy was Narnia, shortly following by The Hobbit, and then the entire legendarium. I was raised on the finest fantasy mankind has yet to offer. As a result, any other attempts often seem paltry, or off-key... Sci-fi, on the other hand, was not encountered through the best of the best, and it has not captured my heart the way "Ye Olde Days" have. As a result, I can sit down and read a less than perfect book, and not be bothered by how it fails to compare with the great master(s). Perhaps it was the somewhat the same for Tolkien. He was, after all, the one to whom his Legendarium was most dear- whatever some of us may feel. He had put decades into his work, and as his written results can attest, he had a pretty good feeling on what made a good yarn and on what made a good yarn memorable, even if it was only an instinctive knowledge. With all this behind him in the fantasy field, is it any wonder that he was dissatisfied with the then-current offerings in fantasy? What I find interesting in the context of this is Tolkien's famous statement to C.S. Lewis, back in the earlier 1930s, about not being able to find the books they liked, and so they must write them themselves. And they did- they set out to write science-fiction. Lewis got the space travel novel, which became Out of the Silent Planet, and its two sequels, while Tolkien got the TimeTravel novel, which ended up getting sucked into the Legendarium, and ultimately coming to rest in the Silmarillion as the "Akallabeth". My point in bringing it up though, is that Tolkien obviously liked Sci-Fi from fairly early on, but was unable to find "the books he liked". Perhaps Isaac Asimov finally filled that need in the 1960s.
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#5 |
Late Istar
Join Date: Mar 2001
Posts: 2,224
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An interesting topic. I've always enjoyed the fact that my favorite author was apparently a fan of second favorite author; Asimov is the only writer for whom my reverence approaches that for Tolkien.
But I must say that I've never seen any particular similarity or connection between the works of the two. In fact, I was rather surprised to find that Tolkien enjoyed science fiction. His own work, while I wouldn't call it anti-scientific, does not strike me as being particularly similar in spirit to the rational, scientific attitude of much (or most) science fiction. The rather absurd image of Mandos calculating the fate of Arda by means some complicated equation embodies this discrepancy perfectly. But, then, I suppose there must be some reason that it is these two authors, and none other, that are my favorites. And judging from the response to this thread so far, I am not alone. Could it be, I wonder, that there is some very deep similarity between the two, difficult to discern but responsible for both their mutual regard and our apparent tendency to enjoy them both? |
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#6 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: commonplace city
Posts: 518
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I do like the Mandopsycho-history thing .. ![]() |
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#7 | |
Doubting Dwimmerlaik
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Heaven's basement
Posts: 2,466
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Remember somewhere in the Foundation trilogy there was the girl who had to 'speak' a paper into existence, and just wasn't that the biggest issue? ![]() Think that it's funny that we (almost) have the speak-write technology today, though I have yet to use it effectively ("I said 'Balrog' not 'ball rug,' not 'bail rock' you insipid machine..."). What might be odd is that Asimov was extrapolating into the future and Tolkien into the past, and I find it easier to 'buy' Tolkien's world than the one that Asimov presumes. I don't think that the reason is the direction of time nor the genre (spaceships vs horses) but due to the inherent abilities of the authors. I can feel Tolkien's world but feel like I'm getting the 'student reader' (Does anyone remember the publication, "Boy's Life?" If so, please substitute.) version of the future from Asimov. Again he's a great author, yet I think that the king of science fiction is Frank Herbert (though his son's works show that an apple can fall way, WAY far from the tree...).
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#8 | ||
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Seoul, South Korea
Posts: 602
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In a way the Foundation series ARE simplistic - it was written when Asimov was still in college. However, it doesn't mean that they aren't great. I still like the 'Caves of Steel', however. Best book Asimov wrote, in my opinion.
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#9 | |
Late Istar
Join Date: Mar 2001
Posts: 2,224
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Eorl of Rohan wrote:
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Incidentally, here's one similarity that comes to my mind - both Asimov and Tolkien tell stories that stretch over vast time periods, that do not have a single core group of characters but rather encompass many generations. And both effectively tell a very large, somewhat loose, but cohesive story over those time scales. Last edited by Aiwendil; 01-15-2006 at 02:42 PM. |
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