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Isaac Asimov |
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Elsewhere on SFGrok: John Scalzi | Orson Scott Card | Philip K. Dick | Robert A. Heinlein | Ray Bradbury | Iain Banks | Frank Herbert | |
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With his elegantly simple Three Laws of Robotics, Isaac Asimov sidestepped the murderous robot cliche that had so dominated science fiction. But even the Good Doctor wasn't completely immune to the lure of killer robots.
7. R. Sammy, The Caves of Steel (1954)
| 1 | Blogcritics |
| 2 | scottaaronson.com |
| 3 | Kotaku |
| 4 | Zubon Book Reviews |
| 5 | Slice of SciFi |
| 6 | Boing Boing |
| 7 | other-worlds-cafe.com |
| 8 | Yahoo! Answers |
| 9 | OnlineWelten |
| 10 | The Mocking Eye |
A single book can inspire a wide range of covers, and sometimes those covers can be works of art themselves. We look at some classic science fiction novels and the various covers they've worn throughout the years. I, Robot by Isaac Asimov: Neuromancer by William Gibson:
Tue, Nov 17 | from io9