j d worthington
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 9, 2006
- Messages
- 13,889
No, he didn't say that about Eando Binder. He has noted that the choice of title was not his, but rather the editor for Gnome Books:
(this is from asimovonline's "History of the Positronic Robot", pt. 3):
The History of the Positronic Robot and Foundation Stories
He has also noted that the series of Adam Link tales (of which "I, Robot" was the first) were among the best examples of the robot-with-emotion in the field. I've not had a chance to read all the tales, but the novelized form (which left at least two out, as I recall) remains a sentimental favorite of mine, as well....
By the way, for those who don't know: Eando Binder was (originally, anyway), not one but two people: Earl and Otto Binder (E and O), brothers who collaborated on sf tales. Later it was all Otto's writing, Earl acting as the agent:
Eando Binder - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
But yes, Asimov was quite a cut-up. The repartee between Asimov and Ellison was always... interesting. And this is one of the reasons Asimov was so often given the task of toastmaster as well as giving out the awards at Worldcons and the like....
On December 28, 1949, Asimov met Martin Greenberg, publisher of Gnome Books. Greenberg wanted to publish a collection of Asimov's robot stories. Asimov agreed, and two days later signed a contract with Greenberg. The following March, Asimov began putting the collection together. He chose to include the eight Astounding stories, along with "Strange Playfellow", changing the titles of the latter story and "Paradoxical Escape" back to "Robbie" and "Escape". He also tied the stories together with a framing story, in which a reporter from the Interplanetary Press interviews Susan Calvin during her retirement from US Robots in 2057. The framing story gives dates for the other stories, mentions a World War which took place shortly before Calvin's birth in 1982, and states that the hyperdrive has been perfected and that several colonies have been established on extrasolar planets. The nine stories, combined with the framing story, brought the collection up to 70,000 words, which Asimov felt was enough. Thus, there would be no need to include "Victory Unintentional" and "Robot AL-76 Goes Astray", which he felt were inferior to the rest. He also didn't bother to include his two then-unpublished robot stories, "First Law" and "Flesh and Metal". Asimov decided to call the collection Mind and Iron. He submitted the book to Greenberg, who accepted it, but changed the title to I, Robot. It was published in December 1950.
(this is from asimovonline's "History of the Positronic Robot", pt. 3):
The History of the Positronic Robot and Foundation Stories
He has also noted that the series of Adam Link tales (of which "I, Robot" was the first) were among the best examples of the robot-with-emotion in the field. I've not had a chance to read all the tales, but the novelized form (which left at least two out, as I recall) remains a sentimental favorite of mine, as well....
By the way, for those who don't know: Eando Binder was (originally, anyway), not one but two people: Earl and Otto Binder (E and O), brothers who collaborated on sf tales. Later it was all Otto's writing, Earl acting as the agent:
Eando Binder - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
But yes, Asimov was quite a cut-up. The repartee between Asimov and Ellison was always... interesting. And this is one of the reasons Asimov was so often given the task of toastmaster as well as giving out the awards at Worldcons and the like....