Lest we forget...

Gerald D. Nordley
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www.gdnordley.com

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/columnists/story/2019-12-28/time-to-celebrate-the-centennial-of-isaac-asimov


COLUMNS

Time to celebrate the centennial of Isaac Asimov
  Portrait of author Isaac Asimov taken in February 1979 at his home in New 
York City. (AP Photo/Marty Reichenthal)( ASSOCIATED PRESS) By RICHARD LEDERER
DEC. 28, 2019 5 AMLate in the last century I was several times a speaker at the 
Dutch Treat Club, a group of New York writers and artists who met each Tuesday 
at Sardi’s restaurant. Those convivial gatherings were punctuated with 
laughter, music and bright conversation. Each time I visited the Dutch Treaters 
I watched Isaac Asimov, with his large, bright eyes; black-framed glasses; 
trademark silvery sideburns; twinkly smile; and clever wit, presiding over the 
festivities. Isaac and I would fire puns at each other, and one time he gave me 
his card. In its entirety it read:ISAAC ASIMOVNATURAL RESOURCEFrom anyone else 
that would be a statement of vaulting pride and over-reaching hubris, but not 
from Asimov. NATURAL RESOURCE is the natural label for the science-fiction 
colossus who dreamt up the Foundation Trilogy, which he considered to be the 
most popular and successful of all his creations, and who formulated the three 
laws of robotics, bestowing upon robots the human touch through the I, 
Robotstories. NATURAL RESOURCE is the natural sobriquet for one of the most 
prolific writers of all time and for the teacher we came to know in his 
innumerable guides to chemistry, biology, physics, astronomy, mathematics, 
genetics, geography, geology, ecology, prehistory to modern history, 
literature, Shakespeare, the Bible, mythology, Gilbert and Sullivan, the 
supernatural and even jokes and limericks, both clean and funny. Making the 
mundane fascinating and the esoteric crystal clear, he may have been the 
world’s greatest explainer. On April 6, 1992, Isaac Asimov shuffled off his 
mortal coil. He had calculated that the average human being is allotted 
2,830,000,000 heartbeats before expiration, and he himself had come very close 
to that number.That’s all that was average about Isaac Asimov. He entered the 
earthly stage a century ago, on Jan. 2, 1920, in Petrovichi, Russia, and his 
family came to the United States three years later. Isaac taught himself to 
read before he was five, entered college at 15 and began writing professionally 
at 18. Typing away eight hours a day, seven days a week in his windowless 
writing room, he published and edited an average of 10 books each year, 
totaling 30 million words! When he wrote full time, he averaged 13 books 
annually. “I’m my own book-of-the-month club,” he crowed. A few other writers 
have birthed more books, but those products are almost always confined to a 
single genre, such as mysteries, westerns and romances. They don’t come close 
to the scope of Isaac Asimov’s multifoliate planets, which include nine of the 
10 categories of the Dewey Decimal Classification System.Fellow science-fiction 
authors were in awe of Asimov. Frederik Pohl opined, “I’m sure there were 
another hundred books in that head.” Robert Heinlein added, “If Isaac doesn’t 
know the answer, don’t go look it up in the Encyclopedia Britannica, because 
they won’t know the answer either.”To the rest of us it would seem that anyone 
who fabricated more than 500 books, translated into more than 40 languages, 
must have reached an age of at least 250. But Isaac Asimov did all that by 72 
and with fewer than 3 billion heartbeats. Barbara Walters once asked Asimov 
what he would do if the doctor told him he had only six months left to live. 
His reply: “Type faster!”
A life of such “scriptomania” would seem to require titanic dedication and 
discipline, but Asimov once confessed in an interview, “It seems to most people 
that to write my books I have to work, but it’s not work to me. The sensation I 
have when I write is pleasure. I enjoy writing, and there’s very little else I 
do enjoy. I have no self-discipline at all. If I had self-discipline, I could 
make myself turn away from the typewriter now and then, but I’m such a lazy 
slob I can never manage it.”In another interview, Asimov revealed that he wrote 
books because he found his more interesting than others on the same subjects. 
Given his quicksilver mind, unquenchable curiosity, voracious knowledge, 
flypaper memory and reader-friendly style, his analysis was spot-on. By the end 
of his years, his ideas and vision had transformed our culture and collective 
imagination. What had once been confined within the tight boundaries of pulp 
magazines, such as Astounding Stories, now permeates how we live and move and 
have our being. In Isaac Asimov’s words, “We are now living in a science 
fictional world.” COLUMNSLATEST
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