Isaac Asimov’s I, Robot (1950)

A few blogs back I wrote about the fan­ta­sy world of Ursu­la K Le Guin and recalled the appeal of brows­ing the array of sci­ence fic­tion book cov­ers on the shelves at WH Smith’s. One of the giants of that genre – and one that I actu­al­ly went to the trou­ble of read­ing – was Isaac Asi­mov.

Born in Smolen­sk in 1920, Asi­mov was the son of Jew­ish par­ents who emi­grat­ed to the US in 1923, and the young Isaac was brought up in Brook­lyn, New York, where he helped his father run a sweet shop (a “can­dy store”, I sup­pose). It was there that he was first exposed to the clas­sic Amaz­ing Sto­ries mag­a­zines that his father also stocked, and he was soon div­ing into the fan­tas­tic worlds of Jules Verne and Edgar Allan Poe, and writ­ing short sto­ries of his own.

Although Asimov’s writ­ing career for many years played sec­ond fid­dle to his pro­fes­sion­al sci­en­tif­ic career (he became a lec­tur­er and pro­fes­sor of bio­chem­istry at Boston Uni­ver­si­ty), his out­put of sci­ence fic­tion was nonethe­less prodi­gious, and even­tu­al­ly the glut of ideas and the suc­cess of his writ­ing encour­aged him to become a full-time author. My expo­sure to Isaac Asi­mov came in the form of his Robot series, notably I, Robot, which my mem­o­ry tells me I inher­it­ed, rather than bought, prob­a­bly from my Uncle Geoff.

Asi­mov wrote 37 short sto­ries and six nov­els about robots and in fact had coined the term “robot­ics” in a 1941 sto­ry. He also came up with his famous and influ­en­tial “Three Laws of Robot­ics”:

  1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inac­tion, allow a human being to come to harm.
  2. A robot must obey the orders giv­en to it by human beings, except where such orders would con­flict with the First Law.
  3. A robot must pro­tect its own exis­tence as long as such pro­tec­tion does not con­flict with the First or Sec­ond Laws.

These Three Laws of Robot­ics, which Asimov‘s robots were sup­posed to obey, have resound­ed down the ages to the present day when the mod­ern pre­oc­cu­pa­tion with arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence toys with the idea that those laws might be breached, as they clear­ly were in The Ter­mi­na­tor!

Here’s a selec­tion of book cov­ers that gave many an illus­tra­tor free rein to por­tray Asimov’s robot­ic world, and start­ing with the bril­liant Ter­mi­na­tor-like cov­er that I remem­ber hav­ing.

Isaac Asi­mov

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *