752 pages, Bantam Spectra, ISBN-13:
978-0307292063
The
Foundation Trilogy
by
Isaac Asimov – that would be Foundation, Foundation and Empire
and Second Foundation – is a collection of short stories originally published
in Astounding Science-Fiction
magazine between May 1942 and January 1950 and thence collected into this
trilogy of books that were originally published between 1951 and 1953 (Asimov later
published Foundation’s Edge in 1982 and Foundation and Earth in
1986, along with the prequels Prelude to Foundation in 1988 and Forward
the Foundation in 1993; don’t know if I’ll get to those, but I’ll keep you
posted).
The
Foundation Trilogy
is
considered a classic of early science fiction, having won the 1966 Hugo Award
for Best All-Time Series (one wonders how one can come up with such an award
when writers are still writing and history has yet to end) and its influence
can be felt throughout Sci-Fi from its original publishing to the modern day,
from properties such as Dune, Star Wars and even Futurama and The Hitchhiker’s Guide
to the Galaxy (which rips off Foundation’s “Encyclopedia Galactica”
shamelessly). Indeed, while reading I picked out any number of modern Sci-Fi
tropes that are now standard but that Asimov invented, an indication as to the
influence of these stories.
There
are two guiding forces around The Foundation Trilogy, one based on the
arguments forwarded by History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
by Edward Gibbon and the other on psychohistory. Working with his editor John
W. Campbell, Asimov developed the concepts of the collapse of a Galactic Empire
sometime in the far-flung future (dates are not given); the mathematician Hari
Seldon spends his life developing a theory of psychohistory, a new and
effective mathematics of sociology, in order to preserve what can be of the
Empire and limit the period of chaos to come after its fall:
Psychohistory
dealt not with man, but man-masses. It was the science of mobs; mobs in their billions.
It could forecast reactions to stimuli with something of the accuracy that a
lesser science could bring to the forecast of a rebound billiard ball. The
reaction of one man could be forecast by no known mathematics; the reaction of
a billion is something else again.
Seldon
foresaw a Dark Age that would last for approximately 30,000 years following the
collapse of the Galactic Empire, an epoch that could very well cause the
extinction of the human race. But Seldon had a plan to combat this catastrophe,
calculating that these thirty millenniums of darkness could be shortened to but
a 1000 years, but only if the right people were in the right places at the
right times to keep the flame of knowledge lit. Thus, he created two
Foundations, groups of scholars ostensibly brought together to write the Encyclopedia
Galactica but that in fact were to work behind the scenes to keep learning
alive through the empire’s fall.
The Foundation
Trilogy,
for all its accolades, is not a masterpiece, much less the Best All-Time Series.
But it is without question the precursor of all the Sci-Fi that came later,
especially considering that the expectations of Sci-Fi for its time was pulp
entertainment (I have to believe, as well, that the fact that an
honest-to-goodness scientist wrote these books added to their intellectual
appeal). It is also a product of its time, when there was still the belief that
science could solve all mankind’s problems and faith in experts was at an
all-time high, a naïveté that subsequent decades – hell, the last couple of
years – has destroyed.
Other ways in which The Foundation Trilogy is a product of
the 1950s: there’s lots of smoking; newspapers still exist; the first woman
doesn’t appear until pg. 197, and then only to model a dress of light; races
aren’t mentioned (but I presume they are white, perhaps some Asian people); religion
– in this case, the worship of technology – is still extant, but only as a tool
of the state to promote and expand its reach; nuclear power is the status of
the enlightened powers while its lack signifies barbarism; psychology is still
a thing; message cylinders are still in use, as is microfilm; royalty is still
around as are, by necessity, dynastic marriages – I could go on, but anyway.
Asimov’s
plot isn’t perfect, but it’s functional, and the myriad technologies and
concepts he conjures up are interesting and plausible (even if others,
mentioned above, are less so). The failings are elsewhere: the characters tend
to be flat, cardboard cut-outs of people; the great leaders of one generation are
virtually indistinguishable from the next; women are virtually nonexistent
(except for Bayta, the rather likable young heroine in the second part of Second Foundation; and Arkady in the
last). And there is zero poetry in Asimov’s prose; instead, there are merely
endless pages of expository dialogue occasionally graced with the most meager
of descriptions.
I
can see why The Foundation Trilogy
inspired other, later writers to create galaxies of their own to prosper in,
and the series itself, while flat, was still entertaining – rather like a warm
Coke: the carbonation is gone and it isn’t at all spunky, but it still quenches
your thirst. And I think I get what Asimov was trying to do with The
Foundation Trilogy, as he moved away from the archetypical science fiction
hero who is right and doesn’t really have any sort of interesting journey, to
characters who learn and grow and change. I’m glad I read it because now I get
so many of the references that I see in other science fiction series, but I
don't think I’ll ever reread it.