welcome!  login | sign up   Facebook Connect
 
Read what you like. Share what you write.

Posted by

botbugg

on Nov 16, 2006
Become a fan

Foundation

4


FOUNDATION

ISAAC ASIMOV

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Contents

Introduction

Part I The Psychohistorians

Part II The Encyclopedists

Part III The Mayors

Part IV The Traders

Part V The Merchant Princes

------------------------------------------------------------------------

THE STORY BEHIND THE "FOUNDATION"

By ISAAC ASIMOV

------------------------------------------------------------------------

The date was August 1, 1941. World War II had been raging for two years.
France had fallen, the Battle of Britain had been fought, and the Soviet
Union had just been invaded by Nazi Germany. The bombing of Pearl Harbor
was four months in the future.

But on that day, with Europe in flames, and the evil shadow of Adolf Hitler
apparently falling over all the world, what was chiefly on my mind was a
meeting toward which I was hastening.

I was 21 years old, a graduate student in chemistry at Columbia University,
and I had been writing science fiction professionally for three years. In
that time, I had sold five stories to John Campbell, editor of Astounding,
and the fifth story, "Nightfall," was about to appear in the September 1941
issue of the magazine. I had an appointment to see Mr. Campbell to tell him
the plot of a new story I was planning to write, and the catch was that I
had no plot in mind, not the trace of one.

I therefore tried a device I sometimes use. I opened a book at random and
set up free association, beginning with whatever I first saw. The book I
had with me was a collection of the Gilbert and Sullivan plays. I happened
to open it to the picture of the Fairy Queen of lolanthe throwing herself
at the feet of Private Willis. I thought of soldiers, of military empires,
of the Roman Empire - of a Galactic Empire - aha!

Why shouldn't I write of the fall of the Galactic Empire and of the return
of feudalism, written from the viewpoint of someone in the secure days of
the Second Galactic Empire? After all, I had read Gibbon's Decline and Fall
of the Roman Empire not once, but twice.

I was bubbling over by the time I got to Campbell's, and my enthusiasm must
have been catching for Campbell blazed up as I had never seen him do. In
the course of an hour we built up the notion of a vast series of connected
stories that were to deal in intricate detail with the thousand-year period
between the First and Second Galactic Empires. This was to be illuminated
by the science of psychohistory, which Campbell and I thrashed out between
us.

On August 11, 1941, therefore, I began the story of that interregnum and
called it "Foundation." In it, I described how the psychohistorian, Hari
Seldon, established a pair of Foundations at opposite ends of the Universe
under such circumstances as to make sure that the forces of history would
bring about the second Empire after one thousand years instead of the
thirty thousand that would be required otherwise.

The story was submitted on September 8 and, to make sure that Campbell
really meant what he said about a series, I ended "Foundation" on a
cliff-hanger. Thus, it seemed to me, he would be forced to buy a second
story.

However, when I started the second story (on October 24), I found that I
had outsmarted myself. I quickly wrote myself into an impasse, and the
Foundation series would have died an ignominious death had I not had a
conversation with Fred Pohl on November 2 (on the Brooklyn Bridge, as it
happened). I don't remember what Fred actually said, but, whatever it was,
it pulled me out of the hole.

"Foundation" appeared in the May 1942 issue of As tounding and the
succeeding story, "Bridle and Saddle," in the June 1942 issue.

After that there was only the routine trouble of writing the stories.
Through the remainder of the decade, John Campbell kept my nose to the
grindstone and made sure he got additional Foundation stories.

"The Big and the Little" was in the August 1944 Astounding, "The Wedge" in
the October 1944 issue, and "Dead Hand" in the April 1945 issue. (These
/ 96 Next Page

Comments & Reviews ^top


Login to post your comment.
Be the first to comment on this!


Recommended


Foundation 2 - Foundation And Empire by Asimov, Isaac

Foundation 5 - Foundation and Earth by Asimov, Isaac

Foundation 3 - Second Foundation by Asimov, Isaac

Foundation 4 - Foundation's Edge by Asimov, Isaac

Isaac Asimov - Foundation 1

Imagine a Day...

Big Dummy's Guide to the Internet