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01 - Asimov, Isaac - Prelude to Foundation
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cs1 23 января 2021
4. The Robots of Dawn (1983 ). extra space
Tartar625 6 августа 2020
если не трудно укажите, пожалуйста, отрывки где есть ошибки. Я исправлю.
Текст портировался из epub, возможно это повлияло.
mema 11 апреля 2020
Постоянно 'c' вместо 't'.
Например, "I chink chat can be arranged".
mema 3 апреля 2020
много опечаток
mema 22 марта 2020
Не хвататет пробелаsevrvicelooked
Написать тут
Описание:
For English training
Автор:
Tartar625
Создан:
22 сентября 2015 в 01:04 (текущая версия от 23 августа 2019 в 23:02)
Публичный:
Да
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Книга
Последовательные отрывки из загруженного файла.
Содержание:
1558 отрывков, 735221 символ
1 Prelude to Foundation
by Isaac Asimov
Author's Note
When I wrote "Foundation," which appeared in the May 1942 issue of Astounding
Science Faction, I had no idea that I had begun a series of stories that would
eventually grow into six volumes and a total of 650,000 words (so far). Nor did
I have any idea that it would be unified with my series of short stories and
novels involving robots and my novels involving the Galactic Empire for a grand
total (so far) of fourteen volumes and a total of about 1,450,000 words.
2 You will see, if you study the publication dates of these books, that there was
a twenty-five-year hiatus between 1957 and 1982, during which I did not add to
this series. This was not because I had stopped writing. Indeed, I wrote
full-speed throughout the quarter century, but I wrote other things. That I
returned to the series in 1982 was not my own notion but was the result of a
combination of pressures from readers and publishers that eventually became
overwhelming.
3 In any case, the situation has become sufficiently complicated for me to feel
that the readers might welcome a kind of guide to the series, since they were
not written in the order in which (perhaps) they should be read.
The fourteen books, all published by Doubleday, offer a kind of history of the
future, which is, perhaps, not completely consistent, since I did not plan
consistency to begin with.
4 The chronological order of the books, in terms of
future history (and not of publication date), is as follows:
1. The Complete Robot (1982). This is a collection of thirty-one robot short
stories published between 1940 and 1976 and includes every story in my earlier
collection 1. Robot (1950). Only one robot short story has been written since
this collection appeared. That is "Robot Dreams," which has not yet appeared in
any Doubleday collection.
5 2. The Caves of Steel (1954). This is the first of my robot novels.
3. The Naked Sun (1957). The second robot novel.
4. The Robots of Dawn (1983 ). The third robot novel.
5. Robots and Empire (1985). The fourth robot novel.
6. The Currents of Space (1952). This is the first of my Empire novels.
7. The Stars, Like Dust- (1951). The second Empire novel.
8. Pebble in the Sky (1950). The third Empire novel.
6 9. Prelude to Foundation (1988). This is the first Foundation novel (although it
is the latest written, so far).
10. Foundation (1951). The second Foundation novel. Actually, it is a collection
of four stories, originally published between 1942 and 1944, plus an
introductory section written for the book in 1949.
11. foundation and Empire (1952). The third Foundation novel, made up of two
stories, originally published in 1945.
7 12. Second foundation (1953). The fourth Foundation novel, made up of two
stories, originally published in 1948 and 1949.
13. Foundations Edge (1982). The fifth Foundation novel.
14. Foundation and Earth (1983). The sixth Foundation novel.
Will I add additional books to the series? I might. There is room for a book
between Robots and Empire (5) and The Currents of Space (6) and between Prelude
to Foundation (9) and Foundation (10) and of course between others as well.
8 And
then I can follow Foundation and Earth (14) with additional volumes-as many as I
like.
Naturally, there's got to be some limit, for I don't expect to live forever, but
I do intend to hang on as long as possible.
Mathematician
CLEON I- . . . The last Galactic Emperor of the Entun dynasty. He was born in
the year 11,988 of the Galactic Era, the same year in which Hari Seldon was
born. (It is thought that Seldon's birthdate, which some consider doubtful, may
have been adjusted to match that of Cleon, whom Seldon, soon after his arrival
on Trantor, is supposed to have encountered.)
Having succeeded to the Imperial throne in 12,010 at the age of twenty-two,
Cleon I's reign represented a curious interval of quiet in those troubled times.
9 This is undoubtedly due to the skills of his Chief of Staff, Eto Demerzel, who
so carefully obscured himself from public record that little is known about him.
Cleon himself . . .
ENCYLOPEDIA GALACTICA
(All quotations from the Encyclopedia Galactica here reproduced are taken from
the 116th Edition, published 1,020 FE by the Encyclopedia Galactica Publishing
Co., Terminus, with permission of the publishers.)
1.
10 Suppressing a small yawn, Cleon said, "Demerzel, have you by any chance ever
heard of a man named Hari Seldon?"
Cleon had been Emperor for just over ten years and there were times at state
occasions when, dressed in the necessary robes and regalia, he could manage to
look stately. He did so, for instance, in the holograph of himself that stood in
the niche in the wall behind him. It was placed so that it clearly dominated the
other niches holding the holographs of several of his ancestors.
 

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