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| Isaac Asimov, The Caves of Steel |
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Following I, Robot (though the story seems
to happen hundreds -thousands?- years after the lifetime of robopsychiatrist Susan Calvin), The Caves of Steel is the
first installment in three stories from the robot series featuring
Detective Elijah Baley. In a futuristic
New York where people live in small apartment units without windows;
the "caves of steel", and where no ones ever sees the sun except in
occasional sessions in the solarium, where bathrooms and kitchens
are communal and rank in society measured by privileges
such as a private washbasin or a sitting place in the expressway (the public means of transport), Elijah Baley is sent on a delicate
mission by his boss and friend, Commissioner Julius Enderby.
In Spacetown, a New York enclave in which
people from the Outer Worlds (people who have emigrated on other
planets hundreds of years ago and have developed different
customs from the earthmen) live in secrecy and isolation, a murder
is committed on the person of Dr Sarton, a man who had plans to
convince the earthmen to welcome robots among them. Most earthmen are
anti-robots and resent the spacers for their scorn and superiority,
and the spacers are convinced that the murder has been perpetrated
by a New Yorker. Public knowledge of the crime could lead the spacers to
declare war on earth and force the earthmen to accept the changes they judge
necessary. Therefore, Elijah has to cooperate in order to solve the
murder discretely. For this, he has to work with a partner who is R. Daneel; ... a robot.
As Elijah wonders how to convince his wife
that they have to accommodate a robot in their apartment (a robot
who is a perfect imitation of a human being), and how to solve a
murder which could have consequences for the future of humanity
before the robot does...
The Caves of Steel is a very decent
mystery, and mostly a very interesting view of a futuristic society
and its problems, which has apparently inspired many subsequent
writers. The problems of the robots and how they apprehend the
world, with their mixture of obvious superiority and more subtle
limitations, is also very interesting...
Rating:    
© Discussing Books, 12/22/2004
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| Further Readings |
By Isaac Asimov:
The Foundation Saga:
Asimov, Isaac Prelude to Foundation
Asimov, Isaac (1951) Foundation
Asimov, Isaac (1952) Foundation and Empire
Asimov, Isaac (1953) Second Foundation
Asimov, Isaac (1982) Foundation's Edge
Asimov, Isaac (1986) Foundation and Earth
Robots Stories and Novels:
Asimov, Isaac (1950) I, Robot
Asimov, Isaac (1964) The Rest of the Robots
Asimov, Isaac (1982) The Complete Robots
Asimov, Isaac (1954) The Caves of Steel
Asimov, Isaac (1957) The Naked Sun
Asimov, Isaac (1983) The Robots of Dawn
Asimov, Isaac (1985) Robots and Empire
Galactic Empire Novels:
Asimov, Isaac (1952) The Currents of Space
Asimov, Isaac (1950) Pebble in the Sky
Asimov, Isaac (1957) Earth is Room Enough
Asimov, Isaac (1955) The Martian Way
Asimov, Isaac (1955) The End of Eternity
Asimov, Isaac (1983) The Winds of Change
Asimov, Isaac (1968) Asimov's Mysteries
Asimov, Isaac (1972) The Gods Themselves
Asimov, Isaac (1990) Nightfall One
Asimov, Isaac (1969) Nightfall Two
Asimov, Isaac (1993) The Bicentennial Man
Asimov, Isaac (1959) Nine Tomorrows
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