Isaac Asimov biography interesting facts. Biographies, stories, facts, photographs. Career and path to world fame


When Isaac Asimov was born, he was surprised to discover that he was born on the territory of Soviet Russia in the town of Petrovichi near Smolensk. He tried to correct this mistake, and three years later, in 1923, his parents moved to New York Brooklyn (USA), where they opened a candy store and lived happily ever after, with sufficient income to finance their son’s education. Isaac became a US citizen in 1928.

It's scary to think what would have happened if Isaac had stayed in the homeland of his ancestors! Of course, it is possible that he would take the place of Ivan Efremov in our fantastic literature, but this is unlikely. Rather, things would have turned out much more gloomy. And so he trained as a biochemist, graduating from Columbia University's chemistry department in 1939, and taught biochemistry at Boston University School of Medicine. Since 1979 - professor at the same university. He never forgot his professional interests: he is the author of many scientific and popular science books on biochemistry. But this is not what made him famous throughout the world.

The year he graduated from university (1939), he made his debut in Amazing Stories with the story “Captured by Vesta.” A brilliant scientific mind was combined in Asimov with dreaminess, and therefore he could not be either a pure scientist or a pure writer. He began writing science fiction. And he was especially good at books in which it was possible to theorize, to build intricate logical chains that suggested many hypotheses, but only one the right decision. These are fantastic detective stories. IN best books Asimov somehow has a detective element, and his favorite heroes - Elijah Bailey and R. Daniel Olivo - are detectives by profession. But even novels that cannot be called 100% detective stories are devoted to uncovering secrets, collecting information, and brilliant logical calculations by unusually smart characters endowed with correct intuition.

Asimov's books take place in the future. This future stretches over many millennia. Here are the adventures of “Lucky” David Starr in the first decades of exploration Solar System, and the settlement of distant planets, starting with the Tau Ceti system, and the formation of the mighty Galactic Empire, and its collapse, and the work of a handful of scientists united under the name of the Academy to create a new, better Galactic Empire, and the growth of the human mind into the universal mind of Galaxia. Asimov essentially created his own Universe, extended in space and time, with its own coordinates, history and morality. And like any creator of the world, he showed a clear desire for epicness. Most likely, he did not plan in advance to turn his science fiction detective story “Caves of Steel” into an epic series. But now the sequel has appeared - “Robots of the Dawn” - it already becomes clear that the chain of individual crimes and accidents that Elijah Bailey and R. Daniel Olivo are investigating is connected with the destinies of humanity.

And yet, even then, Asimov hardly intended to connect the plot of the “Caves of Steel” cycle with the “Academy” trilogy. It happened naturally, as it always does with an epic. It is known that at first novels about King Arthur and the knights Round Table were not connected with each other, much less with the story of Tristan and Isolde. But over time they came together into something common. It’s the same with Asimov’s novels.

And if an epic cycle is created, then it cannot but have a central epic hero. And such a hero appears. It becomes R. Daniel Olivo. Robot Daniel Olivo. In the fifth part of the “Academy” - the novel “The Academy and the Earth” - he already takes the place of the Lord God, the creator of the Universe and the arbiter of human destinies.

Asimov's robots are the most amazing thing created by the writer. Asimov wrote pure science fiction, in which there is no place for magic and mysticism. And yet, not being an engineer by profession, he does not really amaze the reader’s imagination with technical innovations. And his only invention is more philosophical than technical. Asimov's robots and the problems of their relationships with people are a subject of special interest. It feels like the author thought a lot before writing about this. It is no coincidence that even his science fiction competitors, including those who spoke unflatteringly of his literary talent, recognized his greatness as the author of the Three Laws of Robotics. These laws are also expressed philosophically, and not technically: robots should not harm a person or, by their inaction, allow harm to come to him; robots must obey human orders unless this contradicts the first law; robots must protect their existence if this does not contradict the first and second laws. Asimov doesn't explain how this happens, but he says that no robot can be created without following Three Laws. They are laid down in the very basis, in the technical basis of the possibility of building a robot.

But already from these Three Laws a lot of problems arise: for example, a robot will be ordered to jump into a fire. And he will be forced to do this, because the second law is initially stronger than the third. But Asimov's robots - at least Daniel and others like him - are essentially people, only artificially created. They have a unique and unrepeatable personality, an individuality that can be destroyed at the whim of any fool. Asimov was a smart man. He himself noticed this contradiction and resolved it. And many other problems and contradictions that arise in his books were brilliantly resolved by him. It seems that he enjoyed posing problems and finding solutions.

The world of Asimov's novels is a world of bizarre interweaving of surprise and logic. You will never guess what force is behind this or that event in the Universe, who opposes the heroes in their search for truth, who helps them. The endings of Asimov's novels are as unexpected as the endings of O'Henry's stories. And yet, any surprise here is carefully motivated and justified. Asimov does not and cannot have any mistakes.

Individual freedom and its dependence on higher powers. According to Asimov, there are many powerful forces at work in the Galaxy, much more powerful than people. And yet, in the end, everything is decided by people, specific people, like the brilliant Golan Trevize from the fourth and fifth books of the Academy. However, what ultimately happens there is still unknown. Asimov's world is open and ever-changing. Who knows where Asimov’s humanity would have come had the author lived a little longer...

The reader, having entered someone else's alarming, huge and full of confrontation Asimov's Universe, gets used to it as to his own home. When Golan Trevize visits the long-forgotten and desolate planets of Aurora and Solaria, where Elijah Bailey and R. Daniel Olivo lived and operated many thousands of years ago, we feel sadness and devastation, as if we are standing on ashes. This is the deep humanity and emotionality of such a seemingly personal and speculative world created by Asimov.

He lived a short life by Western standards - only seventy-two years and died on April 6, 1992 at the New York University Clinic. But over these years he wrote not twenty, not fifty, not one hundred and not four hundred, but four hundred and sixty-seven books, both fiction, scientific and popular science. His work has been recognized with five Hugo Awards (1963, 1966, 1973, 1977, 1983), two Nebula Awards (1972, 1976), as well as many other prizes and awards. One of the most popular American science fiction magazines, Asimov's Science Fiction and Fantasy, is named after Isaac Asimov. There is something to envy.

Azimov was born (according to documents) on January 2, 1920 in the town of Petrovichi, Mstislavl district, Mogilev province, Belarus (from 1929 to the present day in the Shumyachsky district of the Smolensk region of Russia) into a Jewish family. His parents, Hana-Rakhil Isaakovna Berman (Anna Rachel Berman-Asimov, 1895-1973) and Yuda Aronovich Azimov (Judah Asimov, 1896-1969), were millers by profession. They named him in honor of his late maternal grandfather, Isaac Berman (1850-1901). Contrary to Isaac Asimov's later claims that the original family surname was "Ozimov", all remaining relatives in the USSR bear the surname "Azimov".

As Asimov himself points out in his autobiographies (“In Memory Yet Green”, “It’s Been A Good Life”), his family and the only language I spoke Yiddish as a child; They didn’t speak Russian with him in his family. From fiction to early years he grew up mainly on the stories of Sholom Aleichem. In 1923, his parents took him to the United States (“in a suitcase,” as he himself put it), where they settled in Brooklyn and a few years later opened a candy store.

At the age of 5, Isaac Asimov went to school. (He was supposed to start school at age 6, but his mother changed his birthday to September 7, 1919, in order to send him to school a year earlier.) After finishing tenth grade in 1935, the 15-year-old Asimov entered Seth Low Junior College , but a year later this college closed. Asimov entered the chemistry department at Columbia University in New York, where he received a bachelor's degree (B.S.) in 1939 and a master's degree (M.Sc.) in chemistry in 1941 and entered graduate school. However, in 1942 he went to Philadelphia to work as a chemist at the Philadelphia Shipyard for the Army. Another science fiction writer, Robert Heinlein, worked there with him.

In February 1942, on Valentine's Day, Asimov met on a “blind date” with Gertrude Blugerman. On July 26 they got married. From this marriage was born a son, David (English: David) (1951) and a daughter, Robyn Joan (English: Robyn Joan) (English: 1955).

From October 1945 to July 1946, Azimov served in the army. Then he returned to New York and continued his education. In 1948, he completed graduate school, received a PhD, and entered a postdoctoral fellowship as a biochemist. In 1949, he became a teacher at Boston University School of Medicine, where he became an assistant professor in December 1951 and an associate professor in 1955. In 1958, the university stopped paying him a salary, but formally kept him in his previous position. By this point, Asimov's income as a writer already exceeded his university salary. In 1979 he was awarded the title of full professor.

In 1970, Asimov separated from his wife and almost immediately began living with Janet Opal Jeppson, whom he met at a banquet on May 1, 1959. (They had previously met in 1956, when he gave her an autograph. Asimov did not remember that meeting at all, and Jeppson considered him an unpleasant person.) The divorce took effect on November 16, 1973, and on November 30, Asimov and Jeppson were married. There were no children from this marriage.

He died on April 6, 1992 from heart and kidney failure due to AIDS, which he contracted during heart surgery in 1983.

Literary activity

Asimov began writing at the age of 11. He began writing a book about the adventures of boys living in a small town. He wrote 8 chapters and then abandoned the book. But at the same time it happened interesting case. Having written 2 chapters, Isaac retold them to his friend. He demanded a continuation. When Isaac explained that this was all he had written for now, his friend asked him to give him the book where Isaac had read the story. From that moment on, Isaac realized that he had a gift for writing and began to take his literary work seriously.

In 1941, the story “Nightfall” was published about a planet rotating in a system of six stars, where night falls once every 2049 years. The story achieved enormous fame (according to Bewildering Stories, it was one of the most famous stories ever published). In 1968, the Science Fiction Writers of America declared Nightfall the best book ever written. fantasy stories. The story was included in anthologies more than 20 times, was filmed twice (unsuccessfully), and Asimov himself later called it “a watershed in my professional career.” A hitherto little-known science fiction writer, who published about 10 stories (and about the same number were rejected), became famous writer. Interestingly, Asimov himself did not consider “Nightfall” to be his favorite story.

On May 10, 1939, Asimov began writing the first of his robot stories, the story "Robbie." In 1941, Asimov wrote the story “Liar!” about a robot who could read minds. The famous Three Laws of Robotics begin to appear in this story. Asimov attributed the authorship of these laws to John W. Campbell, who formulated them in a conversation with Asimov on December 23, 1940. Campbell, however, said that the idea belonged to Asimov, he only gave it the formulation. In the same story, Asimov coined the word “robotics” (robotics, the science of robots), which was included in English language. In Asimov's translations into Russian, robotics is also translated as “robotics”, “robotics”. Before Asimov, most stories about robots involved them rebelling or killing their creators. Since the early 1940s, robots in science fiction have obeyed the Three Laws of Robotics, although traditionally no science fiction writer except Asimov explicitly cites these laws.

In 1942, Asimov began the Foundation series of novels. Initially, "Foundation" and the stories about robots belonged to different worlds, and only in 1980 Asimov decided to combine them.

Since 1958, Asimov began to write much less fiction and much more popular science literature. Since 1980 he resumed writing science fiction continuation of the Foundation series.

Asimov's three favorite stories were " Last question"The Last Question", "The Bicentennial Man" and "The Ugly Little Boy", in that order. My favorite novel was The Gods Themselves.

Publicistic activity

Most of the books written by Asimov are popular science, and in a variety of fields: chemistry, astronomy, religious studies, and a number of others.

And no later January 2

In one of his addresses to readers, Asimov formulated the humanistic role of science fiction in the modern world as follows: “History has reached a point where humanity is no longer allowed to be at enmity. People on Earth must be friends. I have always tried to emphasize this in my works... I don’t think it is possible to make all people love each other, but I would like to destroy hatred between people. And I quite seriously believe that science fiction is one of the links that helps unite humanity. The problems that we raise in science fiction become pressing problems of all humanity... The science fiction writer, the reader of science fiction, science fiction itself serve humanity.”

Biography

Azimov was born (according to documents) on January 2, 1920 in the town of Petrovichi, Smolensk province, RSFSR (now Russkovskoe rural settlement, Shumyachsky district, Smolensk region) into a Jewish family. His parents, Anna Rachel Isaakovna Berman (Anna Rachel Berman-Asimov, -) and Yuda Aronovich Azimov (Judah Asimov, -), were millers. They named him in honor of his late maternal grandfather, Isaac Berman (-). Contrary to Isaac Asimov's later claims that the original family surname was "Ozimov", all remaining relatives in the USSR bear the surname "Azimov".

As a child, Asimov spoke Yiddish and English. In fiction, in his early years, he grew up mainly on the stories of Sholom Aleichem. His parents took him to the USA (“in a suitcase,” as he himself put it), where they settled in Brooklyn and a few years later opened a candy store.

At age 5, Isaac Asimov went to school in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn (he was supposed to start school at age 6, but his mother changed his birthday to September 7, 1919, in order to send him to school a year earlier). After finishing tenth grade in 1935, fifteen-year-old Asimov entered Seth Low Junior College, but the college closed a year later. Asimov entered the chemistry department at Columbia University in New York, where he received a bachelor's degree (B.S.) in 1939 and a master's degree (M.Sc.) in chemistry in 1941 and entered graduate school. However, in 1942, he left for Philadelphia to work as a chemist at the Philadelphia Shipyard for the Army. Another science fiction writer, Robert Heinlein, worked there with him.

In 1970, Asimov separated from his wife and almost immediately got together with Janet Opal Jeppson (English) Russian, whom he met at a banquet on May 1, 1959. (They had previously met in 1956, when he gave her an autograph. Asimov did not remember that meeting, and Jeppson considered him an unpleasant person at the time.) The divorce became effective on November 16, 1973, and on November 30, Asimov and Jeppson were married. There were no children from this marriage.

Main awards

Bibliography

The most famous science fiction works

  • The collection of short stories "I, Robot" ("I, Robot"), in which Asimov developed a code of ethics for robots. It was he who wrote the Three Laws of Robotics;
  • Cycle about the galactic empire: “Pebble in the Sky” (“Pebble in the sky”), “The Stars, Like Dust” (“Stars like dust”) and “The Currents of Space” (“Cosmic currents”);
  • A series of novels “Foundation” (“Foundation”, also this word was translated as “Foundation”, “Foundation”, “Establishment” and “Academy”) about the collapse of the galactic empire and the birth of a new social order;
  • Novel “The Gods Themselves” (“The gods themselves”), central theme which - rationalism without morality leads to evil;
  • Novel " The End of Eternity" (“The End of Eternity”), which describes Eternity (an organization that controls time travel and makes changes human history) and its collapse;
  • A series about the adventures of a space ranger Lucky Starr.
  • The story “The Bicentennial Man” (“Bicentennial Man”), based on which a film of the same name was made in 1999.
  • The series “Detective Elijah Bailey and the Robot Daniel Olivo” is a famous cycle of four novels and one story about the adventures of an earthling detective and his partner, a robot cosmonite: “Mother Earth”, “Caves of Steel”, “The Naked Sun”, “Mirror reflection", "Robots of the Dawn", "Robots and Empire", "Murder at ABC".

Almost all of the writer’s cycles, as well as individual works, form the “History of the Future”.

Isaac Asimov (Isaac Asimov, birth name Isaac Yudovich Ozimov; January 2, 1920, Petrovichi, RSFSR - April 6, 1992, New York, USA) - American science fiction writer, science popularizer, biochemist.

Author of about 500 books, mostly fiction (primarily in the genre of science fiction, but also in other genres: fantasy, detective, humor) and popular science (in a variety of areas - from astronomy and genetics to history and literary criticism). Multiple Hugo and Nebula Award winner. Some terms from his works - robotics (robotics, robotics), positronic (positronic), psychohistory (psychohistory, behavioral science large groups people) - have become firmly established in English and other languages. In the Anglo-American literary tradition Asimov, along with Arthur C. Clarke and Robert Heinlein, is considered one of the “Big Three” science fiction writers.

In one of his addresses to readers, Asimov formulated the humanistic role of science fiction in the modern world as follows: “History has reached a point where humanity is no longer allowed to be at enmity. People on Earth must be friends. I have always tried to emphasize this in my works... I don’t think it is possible to make all people love each other, but I would like to destroy hatred between people. And I quite seriously believe that science fiction is one of the links that helps unite humanity. The problems that we raise in science fiction become pressing problems of all humanity... The science fiction writer, the reader of science fiction, science fiction itself serve humanity.”

Science Fiction Forecasters - Isaac Asimov

Azimov was born (according to documents) on January 2, 1920 in the town of Petrovichi, Klimovichi district, Mogilev province, RSFSR (since 1929 - Shumyachsky district, Smolensk region) into a Jewish family. His parents, Anna Rachel Berman-Asimov (1895-1973) and Yuda Aronovich Azimov (Judah Asimov, 1896-1969), were millers by profession. They named him in honor of his late maternal grandfather, Isaac Berman (1850-1901). Contrary to Isaac Asimov's later claims that the original family surname was "Ozimov", all remaining relatives in the USSR bear the surname "Azimov".

As a child, Asimov spoke Yiddish and English. In fiction, in his early years, he grew up mainly on the stories of Sholom Aleichem. In 1923, his parents took him to the United States (“in a suitcase,” as he himself put it), where they settled in Brooklyn and a few years later opened a candy store.

At the age of 5, Isaac Asimov went to school in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn. He was supposed to start school at age 6, but his mother changed his birthday to September 7, 1919, in order to send him to school a year earlier. After finishing tenth grade in 1935, 15-year-old Azimov entered Seth Low Junior College, but the college closed a year later. Asimov entered the chemistry department at Columbia University in New York, where he received a bachelor's degree (B.S.) in 1939 and a master's degree (M.Sc.) in chemistry in 1941 and entered graduate school. However, in 1942 he went to Philadelphia to work as a chemist at the Philadelphia Shipyard for the Army. Another science fiction writer, Robert Heinlein, worked there with him.

Asimov began writing at the age of 11. He began writing a book about the adventures of boys living in a small town. He wrote 8 chapters and then abandoned the book. But an interesting incident happened. Having written 2 chapters, Isaac retold them to his friend. He demanded a continuation. When Isaac explained that this was all he had written for now, his friend asked him to give him the book where Isaac had read the story. From that moment on, Isaac realized that he had a gift for writing and began to take his literary work seriously.

In 1941, the story “Nightfall” was published about a planet rotating in a system of six stars, where night falls once every 2049 years. The story achieved enormous fame (according to Bewildering Stories, it was one of the most famous stories ever published). In 1968, the Science Fiction Writers Association of America declared Nightfall to be the best science fiction story ever written. The story was included in anthologies more than 20 times, was filmed twice, and Asimov himself later called it “a watershed in my professional career.” The hitherto little-known science fiction writer, who published about 10 stories (and about the same number were rejected), became a famous writer. Interestingly, Asimov himself did not consider “Nightfall” to be his favorite story.

On May 10, 1939, Asimov began writing the first of his robot stories, the story "Robbie." In 1941, Asimov wrote the story “Liar!” about a robot who could read minds. The famous Three Laws of Robotics begin to appear in this story. Asimov attributed the authorship of these laws to John W. Campbell, who formulated them in a conversation with Asimov on December 23, 1940. Campbell, however, said that the idea belonged to Asimov, he only gave it the formulation. In the same story, Asimov coined the word “robotics” (robotics, the science of robots), which entered the English language. In Asimov's translations into Russian, robotics is also translated as “robotics”, “robotics”.

In the collection of short stories I, Robot, which brought the writer worldwide fame, Asimov dispels widespread fears associated with the creation of artificial intelligent beings. Before Asimov, most stories about robots involved them rebelling or killing their creators. Asimov's robots are not mechanical villains plotting to destroy the human race, but assistants to people, often smarter and more humane than their owners. Since the early 1940s, robots in science fiction have been subject to the Three Laws of Robotics, although traditionally no science fiction writer except Asimov explicitly cites these laws.

In 1942, Asimov began the Foundation series of novels. Initially, "Foundation" and the stories about robots belonged to different worlds, and only in 1980 Asimov decided to combine them.

Since 1958, Asimov began to write much less fiction and much more popular science literature. From 1980 he resumed writing science fiction with the continuation of the Foundation series.

Asimov's three favorite stories were "The Last Question", "The Bicentennial Man" and "The Ugly Little Boy", in that order. My favorite novel was The Gods Themselves.

In February 1942, on Valentine's Day, Asimov met on a "blind date" with Gertrude Blugerman. On July 26 they got married. From this marriage was born a son, David (1951), and a daughter, Robyn Joan (1955).

From October 1945 to July 1946, Azimov served in the army. Then he returned to New York and continued his education. In 1948, he completed his graduate studies, received a PhD (Doctor of Science) degree in biochemistry, and entered a postdoctoral fellowship as a biochemist. In 1949, he became a teacher at Boston University School of Medicine, where he became an assistant professor in December 1951 and an associate professor in 1955. In 1958, the university stopped paying him a salary, but formally kept him in his previous position. By this point, Asimov's income as a writer already exceeded his university salary. In 1979 he was awarded the title of full professor.

In the 1960s, Asimov was under investigation by the FBI for possible ties to communists. The reason was a denunciation of Azimov’s respectful review of Russia as the first country to build a nuclear power plant. Suspicions were finally cleared against the writer in 1967.

In 1970, Asimov separated from his wife and almost immediately became involved with Janet Opal Jeppson, whom he met at a banquet on May 1, 1959. (They had previously met in 1956, when he gave her an autograph. Asimov did not remember that meeting, and Jeppson considered him an unpleasant person at the time.) The divorce became effective on November 16, 1973, and on November 30, Asimov and Jeppson were married. There were no children from this marriage.

Died on April 6, 1992 from heart and kidney failure due to HIV infection(leading to AIDS), which he contracted during heart surgery in 1983. According to the will, the body was cremated and the ashes were scattered.

Biography of Isaac Asimov

The most famous fantastic works Azimova:

A collection of short stories, I, Robot, in which Asimov developed a code of ethics for robots. It was he who wrote the Three Laws of Robotics;
A series of 3 novels about a galactic empire: Pebble in the Sky, The Stars, Like Dust and The Currents of Space;
A series of novels “Foundation” (“Foundation”, also this word was translated as “Foundation”, “Foundation”, “Establishment” and “Academy”) about the collapse of the galactic empire and the birth of a new social order;
The novel “The Gods Themselves” (“The Gods Themselves”), the central theme of which is that rationalism without morality leads to evil;
The novel "The End of Eternity", which describes Eternity (the organization that controls time travel and changes human history) and its collapse;
A series about the adventures of space ranger Lucky Starr (see Lucky Starr series);
The story “The Bicentennial Man”, based on which a film of the same name was made in 1999.

The series “Detective Elijah Bailey and the Robot Daniel Olivo” is a famous cycle of four novels and one story about the adventures of an earthling detective and his partner, a robot cosmonite: “Mother Earth”, “Caves of Steel”, “The Naked Sun”, “Mirrored” reflection", "Robots of the dawn", "Robots and Empire".

Almost all of the writer’s cycles, as well as individual works, form the “History of the Future.”

Many of Asimov's works have been filmed, the most famous films being “Bicentennial Man” and “I, Robot.”


Isaac Yudovich Azimov. Born on January 2, 1920 in the village of Petrovichi, Shumyachsky district, Smolensk region, RSFSR (Russia). Died in New York on April 6, 1992.

Who it?

First of all, Isaac Asimov is an American science fiction writer. During his 72 year life he wrote almost 500 books. Agree, incredible performance. And these are not only books in the science fiction genre, he also wrote about the Bible, about Literature, and, of course, about Science. The writer himself was a biochemist by training, and therefore, like any scientist, he loved science very much and also knew how to in simple language write about her. More than half of his books are non-fiction. So he can be called a successful popularizer of science.

But the writer not only productively wrote a large number of books, he wrote them very well, having perfectly mastered this skill. This is proven by numerous various awards in English literature. Asimov became a multiple winner of the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards. And some of his works won 3 awards at once.

The author is also famous for the fact that in his works he came up with how a person and a robot should interact, introducing into the basis of the work of the brain of robots, the so-called three laws of robotics, which almost everyone has heard of at least once. In those days, people were afraid of robots, and in various works they were evil. As for Asimov, they are kind and “deeply decent,” unlike people. Asimov generally had an extremely positive outlook on life.

His works also contain such new concepts as “robotics”, “positronic” (about the robot’s brain) and “psychohistory” (the science of predicting the behavior of large masses from the “Foundation” series). These new words have become firmly established in many languages ​​of the world.

Birth story

As Azimov himself claims, his real name is Isaac Yudovich Ozimov. However, all of his relatives who remained in the USSR are Asimovs.

Was born future writer near Smolensk on the territory of the USSR (then still the RSFSR) in a Jewish family in 1920. Exact date birth is unknown due to the difference between Jewish and Gregorian calendar, but Azimov himself preferred to celebrate his birthday on January 2. He did not know Russian; his family spoke Yiddish (the Jewish language of the Germanic group). In 1923, his parents emigrated with him to the United States, fleeing the revolution, where they settled in Brooklyn, a borough of New York.

Education

Talented since childhood

Isaac learned to read when he was not even 5 years old, and at the age of 7 he was already a regular visitor to the library. He read a lot. I went to school at the age of 5, and amazed everyone with my abilities so much that I was able to skip classes and finish the whole school course at 15 years old with all sorts of differences.

After receiving secondary education, at the request of his parents, he tried to become a doctor. But Isaac realized that this was not for him, he was afraid of blood, he felt bad. And instead, he tried to enter the most prestigious college, Columbia University. But he didn’t pass the interview and entered a junior college in Brooklyn.

But a year later this college was closed, and Azimov ended up at Columbia University, but not as a student, but as a free listener. But already in 1939, at the age of 19, he received a bachelor's degree, and in 1941 he became a master's degree in chemistry.

From 1942 to 1945 he worked as a chemist at the Philadelphia Navy Yard. After which he served in the army until 1946.

After the army in 1948, he returned to study and completed graduate school, receiving a doctorate in chemistry. And the next year he got a job as a teacher at Boston University School of Medicine, where he first became an assistant professor in 1951, then an associate professor in 1955, and was promoted to professor in 1979.

Love for work

Also in school years, Azimov was instilled with a love of work. When the family's second son, Stanley, was born, Isaac had to help his father. Every day at six in the morning he got up and went to deliver newspapers. And after school he ran home and stood behind the counter until late. The Azimovs then had their own confectionery shop, which was bought by their father. If he saw Isaac being late from school or reading a book, he immediately accused him of laziness. Thus, the habit of work remained with the writer for the rest of his life. In his autobiography he wrote:

I worked ten hours, seven days a week, all of which time I spent in the shop. Even when circumstances forced me to leave for a couple of minutes, the question began to torment me: Lord, what’s it like in the shop?

Because of this, the writer was deprived of communication with his peers, did not make friends, including with girls, and this continued for quite some time. for a long time. But the lack of communication was later more than made up for. Later, as a guest at numerous conferences, he was a lover of flirting with women, and was as good at it as he was at everything else.

By the way, it was then, in the shop, that the future science fiction writer became acquainted with science fiction (SF). He was 9 years old when SF magazines began appearing on the shelves of the store. The father considered such reading inappropriate for his son, but later Isaac managed to convince his father that since the word “science” was in the magazine “Science Wonder Stories”, then the content must be useful.

Career and path to world fame

In 1938, his favorite SF magazine was Astounding, to which he often sent letters. And it was there that he sent his first story, and went there in person, without entrusting this matter to the mail. The story was rejected, but the magazine's editor-in-chief, 28-year-old John W. Campbell, living legend in the flesh for Isaac, devoted an entire hour to talking with the eighteen-year-old boy. And gave him some advice. The next two stories were also rejected, but after four months he sent his third story to another magazine, “Amazing Stories,” which was accepted and Asimov received his first fee - $64. Campbell only accepted Asimov's sixth story, which won third place in the magazine's reader vote, beating even some generally recognized masters.

Later in 1940, everything Asimov wrote was published somewhere. Years later, he tried to thank Campbell for his help, but he did not accept it, saying that he had given advice to hundreds of young writers, but how many of them became Asimov?

Interestingly, because of Campbell, Asimov completely abandoned aliens in his works. The fact is that the editor’s views were such that he did not believe in the equality of people and also believed that a person would beat all sorts of “aliens” out there, and often the stories were rewritten by the editors after the purchase. And some were not accepted at all. As a consequence, in the Foundation Universe, the entire galaxy is populated exclusively by humans. But the stories about robots talked about the relationship between man and machine, and the theme of people’s superiority over someone else did not make sense.

By the way, it was Campbell who helped formulate the three laws of robotics, and Asimov ceded the authorship to him, and even later dedicated the collection “I, Robot” to him. Campbell himself said that he only got them from Asimov’s stories.

In 1941, the famous story “The Coming of Night” was written, which many years later became a full-fledged novel. And it was in this year that Asimov came up with the idea of ​​stories about the Galactic Empire, by analogy with the Roman Empire, about its life and fall. The first story was called “Foundation” and was received with restraint, but the second and subsequent ones did not fall below second place in the reader vote.

In 1942, there was a war and Campbell introduced Asimov to another famous science fiction writer, Robert Heinlein, who was then serving in the Army and Navy in Philadelphia, where he received an invitation to the position of chemist, where he received a good salary. But in 1946, Azimov was called up for regular service in the army, as a private. Where he was a clerk in the unit that prepared the test nuclear bomb V Pacific Ocean. And yet, until 1945, Isaac wrote several more stories in the “Foundation” universe, for which he received good fees.

When he returned to Columbia University, he continued working on his dissertation and discovered his good teaching skills. And in 1948, he first tried his hand at journalism and, to the writer’s surprise, the article was a great success, especially among chemists, which even helped him when applying for his doctorate.

In 1949 he wrote his last story from the “Foundation” series, ending the series (for 32 years). And then he received a contract to publish his first book - the novel “Pebble in the Sky”.

The publisher liked the novel and the sequels were subsequently published: “Stars Like Dust” and “Cosmic Currents”. He was also offered to publish a series of fiction for teenagers, which could become the basis for a television series. Since Asimov did not like any television program of this kind, he did not want anything like this to be associated with him, and for the only time in his career he was published under the pseudonym Paul French.

Other publishing houses also showed interest in Asimov, and a collection of his stories about robots was published in one book, “I, Robot,” and then the entire “Foundation” series in three volumes. This series became the most popular of Asimov's books, and still sells millions of copies.

In 1952, a popular science book for teenagers, “The Chemistry of Life,” opened a new path in his career. And it was followed by other books on a similar topic. Here is what Asimov writes about this:

One day, when I came home, I admitted to myself that I like to write journalism... Not just with knowledge of the matter, not just to make money - but much more than that: with pleasure...

In 1954, Asimov was offered to write a novel about robots, which he did not want to do, because he only wrote stories about them, but he was given the idea of ​​​​writing a detective novel, knowing his love for this genre. This is how one of the best novels writer “Steel Caves”, which became the beginning new series novels about robots. Few people managed to successfully combine detective story with science fiction, and Asimov is one of the few who did it perfectly.

In 1958, Azimov retired from teaching and began to engage only in writing. At this point, he already had a bunch of publishers who wanted to work with him. And he began to write journalism, which then brought him more money than science fiction. This is because it was possible to write more for journalism and use already accumulated material. All this captivated the writer so much that he decided to become the best popularizer of science in the world. In the same year, he was offered to write a permanent column in the magazine “Fantasy and Science Fiction,” which he wrote all his life, writing 399 articles there.

  • "The Intelligent Man's Guide to Science" ("Guide to Science for an Intelligent Man") 1960
  • "Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology" ("Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology", 1964)

He was also interested in history, wrote about ancient Greece, Egypt and the Roman Empire. And even, being an atheist, he wrote about the Bible.

By the early seventies, having written a hundred books, he was already considered the best popularizer of science in the world, he was well received everywhere, in all universities, where he sometimes lectured, in all publishing houses, at conventions and parties. He was a ladies' man and loved to flirt with pretty women at various events. He also used this reputation in his books: ("Lustful Old Man", 1971) and "Lecherous Limericks" ("Lecherous Limericks", 1975)

Asimov became a literary phenomenon, very extraordinary personality, a recognized genius. He was sure that everyone should be interested in the same thing as he was, in everything he said, wrote and thought. And perhaps he was right. Everyone knew about him. Any book or magazine with his name was doomed to success. Each A new book Asimov helped sell his other books, expanding his fan base. And he already wrote very easily.

He also did not give up science fiction and compiled numerous anthologies.

And in 1972 he began writing again fantasy novels. Having returned beautifully, having released the best novel, according to critics, “The Gods Themselves,” which took all possible awards.

Further, in honor of his name and with his consent, it was opened new magazine science fiction “Asimov’s”, which by the way is successfully published to this day. There he was not the editor-in-chief, but wrote only a small column. But he promised that as soon as there was something sci-fi for the magazine format, they would have it.

By 1982, he returned to the Foundation series, releasing a sequel, Foundation Crisis, written specifically in the style of 30 years earlier, the novel was received exceptionally well.

In 1984, the writer had already published two hundred books. And all his subsequent novels become bestsellers:

Asimov is turning into a very rich writer, if before he wrote a lot of journalism, including for financial reasons, now each of his new science fiction novels brings him more than ten popular science books. His face becomes recognizable, he is the first of the writers to appear on television and in commercials. He supports many aspiring authors with his name, gives away ideas, and by this time money and fame no longer interested him, and he did not have mansions or yachts, but only a typewriter and a quiet room with curtained windows.

Towards the end of his life, in collaboration with Robert Silverberg, he reworked three of his famous stories into the novels Nightfall, Bicentennial Man and The Ugly Boy.

And in the spring of 1993, after the death of the writer, his last book“I, Asimov” is the third volume of his autobiography, which he dictated to his wife already in the hospital.

Personal life

In 1942, on Valentine's Day, on a blind date, he met his future wife, Gertrud Blugerman. And a few months later, on July 26, they got married. At that time, Asimov lived in Philadelphia and worked as a chemist in the navy. Then, after the service, they went to live in Boston in 1949. They had two children, a son, David (1951), and a daughter, Robin Joan (1955). But it so happened that their marriage slowly fell apart over the decades. They eventually separated in 1970 and officially divorced three years later on November 16, 1973. The divorce was painful, including from a financial point of view - it cost the writer 50 thousand dollars (at that time this was a lot of money). In his autobiography, he took full blame on himself, saying that he could not be named good husband that he was selfish and was only concerned with his books.

Almost immediately after the divorce, he married Janet Opill Jeppson (November 30, 1973), a psychiatrist whom he met at the New York World Convention back in 1956. He will stay with her. Janet Asimov would later help publish several of his books after his death, including his final autobiography.

How did the writer die?

Back in 1977, Azimov suffered a stroke, and in 1983 he underwent successful heart surgery. But later it turned out that the blood donor was HIV infected. The writer hid about this disease because it could have a negative impact on him and his family; then there was discrimination against HIV-infected people in society. After death, the family decided not to disclose the real reason death, because at this time, one famous American tennis player spoke about his illness, which he also received after surgery, and this caused a lot of discussion in society. The doctors insisted on secrecy. Ten years later, when most of Asimov's doctors were no longer alive, Janet Asimov published the real reason death in one of the editions of his last autobiography.

Asimov himself said that he hoped to die by falling face down on his keyboard. typewriter. And in one of the interviews, when he was asked what he would do if he was told that he had six months to live, he replied “I will type faster.” But he spent his last weeks in hospital and was kept alive by medications. And on April 6, 1992, Isaac Asimov left us. According to his will, the body was cremated and the ashes were scattered.

The front pages of many newspapers wrote about his death. And two weeks later, CNN released a retrospective program about his career and life. Before this, this was done only for politicians and movie stars. National Radio aired his 1988 interview, and his own words became his obituary.

For the first time, the whole world mourned the passing of a science fiction writer.

It is said that his last words were:

It was a good life

It was interesting? Tell your friends about Asimov.

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