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Product Description
The electrifying supplement to Caves of Steel in that Elijah Baley is once some-more teemed adult with R. Daneel. The dual contingency transport to Solaria, where no tellurian has left in over a thousand years! Reacting in fear opposite a technological supremacy of a Outer Worlds, a people of Earth have dark themselves in immeasurable subterraneous cities, nursing a loathing for Spacers. The fifty Outer Worlds of a Spacers together are home to fewer people than world Earth. And home to many, many some-more robots. Earthmen hatred Spacer robots, too...But Baley doesn't. He once had a drudge partner, R. Daneel- and when a authorities of a world Solaria ask tellurian assistance in questioning a murder, Baley is once again teamed with Daneel. He is a initial Earthman in a millennium to transport to a Outer Worlds...and he contingency continue a glisten of a object distant some-more lethal than Earth's.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #7555 in eBooks
- Published on: 2011-04-13
- Released on: 2011-04-13
- Format: Kindle eBook
- Number of items: 1
Editorial Reviews
From a Publisher
A millennium into a future, dual advancements have altered a march of tellurian history: a colonization of a Galaxy and a origination of a positronic brain. On a pleasing Outer World world of Solaria, a handful of tellurian colonists lead a hermit-like existence, their each need attended to by their true drudge servants. To this bizarre and provocative world comes Detective Elijah Baley, sent from a streets of New York with his positronic partner, a drudge R. Daneel Olivaw, to solve an implausible murder that has rocked Solaria to a foundations. The plant had been so reserved that he seemed to his associates usually by holographic projection. Yet someone had gotten tighten adequate to shillelagh him to genocide while robots looked on. Now Baley and Olivaw are faced with dual transparent impossibilities: Either a Solarian was killed by one of his robots--unthinkable underneath a laws of Robotics--or he was killed by a lady who desired him so many that she never came into his presence!
From a Inside Flap
A millennium into a future, dual advancements have altered a march of tellurian history: the colonization of a Galaxy and a origination of a positronic brain. On a pleasing Outer World world of Solaria, a handful of tellurian colonists lead a hermit-like existence, their each need attended to by their true drudge servants. To this bizarre and provocative world comes Detective Elijah Baley, sent from a streets of New York with his positronic partner, a drudge R. Daneel Olivaw, to solve an implausible murder that has rocked Solaria to a foundations. The plant had been so reserved that he seemed to his associates usually by holographic projection. Yet someone had gotten tighten adequate to shillelagh him to genocide while robots looked on. Now Baley and Olivaw are faced with dual transparent impossibilities: Either a Solarian was killed by one of his robots--unthinkable underneath a laws of Robotics--or he was killed by a lady who desired him so many that she never came into his presence!
About a Author
Isaac Asimov was a Grand Master of a Science Fiction Writers of America, a owner of drudge ethics, a world's many inclusive author of novella and non-fiction. The Good Doctor's novella has been enjoyed by millions for some-more than half a century.
Customer Reviews
Most useful patron reviews
34 of 34 people found a following examination helpful.
Naked Sun, won't we come, and rinse divided a rain
By Andrew McCaffrey
THE NAKED SUN is a smart tiny novel that is positively a product of Isaac Asimov. Not usually since of a entire robots, yet since of a informed themes that Asimov explored over a march of his decades-long career. On a surface, a novel is a science-fiction poser story told in a author's common beguiling style. But by a time we reached a finish of a book, we satisfied that Asimov had been doing something a tiny cleverer than his normal runaround, and on reaching a conclusion, we immediately flipped behind and started revisiting some of a progressing scenes to locate what we had missed a initial time around.
THE NAKED SUN starts adult where THE CAVES OF STEEL left off, nonetheless we positively do not need to have examination a progressing book to suffer this one. Earthman Detective Elijah Baley is once again teamed adult with R. (for Robot) Daneel Olivaw to solve an unexplained murder. The gimmick this time is that a carnage occurred on one of a puzzling Outer Worlds, and Baley contingency not usually act as policeman, yet as an unaccepted view for an Earth supervision extraordinary as to what a enlightenment is like on those advanced, robot-dependent planets.
The poser is rather clever, nonetheless we did figure out what a murder arms contingency have been before Baley did. As common with Asimov's mysteries, we found myself enjoying a examination some-more than a occasional tract proof that's thrown to a audience. In a box of this book, a storyline has some plain twists and turns, a usually genuine smirch being that a expel of characters is so tiny that one could usually collect a think during pointless to have a flattering good shot of rightly identifying a killer.
The genuine star of this story is a star that Asimov builds. The Earth is still a lagging, questionable and enclosed universe of THE CAVES OF STEEL, yet now we spin a courtesy out to one of a cluster worlds, Solaria. we could tell that Asimov was carrying a blast formulating this society, giving us all kinds of sum such as this planet's glacial attribute with Earth, a ethereal attribute with other Outer Worlds, a race levels, a staggeringly high ratio of robots to people, etc. But he has even some-more fun giving birth to a inhabitants. He has them still as tangible humans, yet from an intensely lopsided perspective. For many of a book, it's a story of these bizarre people and their peculiar etiquette that overpowers what is now going on in a murder investigation. This unequivocally creates for an engaging read, as once we get to a end, we find that a investigator portions were usually delegate to a genuine indicate of a book.
Often Asimov would insert tiny pieces of amicable explanation into his fictions, with varying levels of success. And indeed, a summation during a end, where Baley lets a cat out of a bag and tells us what a novel has been exploring, is a tiny on a awkward side. But a genuine delight is how a author sensitively and cunningly led us down a garden trail to a end. When we non-stop a book to page one and found Elijah Baley nervously drifting into a Washington, DC airfield (by perfect fluke we was creation a same approach, despite we started my tour in a opposite city than Baley had) and wishing to once again be protected indoors, we chucked to myself, recalling passages from Asimov's journal that discussed his mythological fear of drifting and his amiable claustrophilia. While reading all this things about people who hatred flying, people who have an insincere fear of face-to-face meetings, and people who crave for enclosed spaces, we insincere that Asimov was doing zero some-more than his common shtick of inserting his possess neuroses into his fictions (there's zero wrong with this; it can make for unequivocally engaging reading, and it's something we utterly suffer from Asimov). And with that arrogance in place, we didn't compensate most mind to what a author was indeed environment adult underneath a surface. So when a finish of a novel rolled around and it was unexpected suggested what he had been adult to this whole time, we was unequivocally agreeably surprised.
I like pounded books that work on some-more than one level, and THE NAKED SUN gives us a unequivocally crafty demeanour during tellurian fears while also providing an engaging murder mystery. No, a characters aren't terribly deep, yet a tract is a fun one and a additional bit of universe building that Asimov engages in raises this book up. we like to examination Asimov novels while traveling, since we find them to be a good relaxing approach to pass a few hours. Anytime a good alloy can yield me with something even improved and smarter than his common high customary of amusing, dainty adventures, I'm a unequivocally happy camper indeed.
10 of 10 people found a following examination helpful.
If we favourite Caves of Steel, afterwards collect this up.....perfect!!
By Surface to Air Missle
The Naked Sun is a second book in Asimov's drudge array and substantially my favorite yet all are value reading. This book continues a unconventional Sherlockian tour of Elijah Bailey and his straight-man drudge sidekick Daneel Olivaw. This time they tour to a universe of Solaria to solve a murder that has domestic implications opposite a galaxy.
Asimov creates and socially engaging universe in Solaria where people equivocate tellurian contact, live miles detached from any other and contingent on robots to automate their multitude and keep their customary of vital of high. Asimov skilfully ties a intricacies of a Solarians into a poser of a murder and ongoing multi book arc or drudge progression. The whole thing is executed with Asimov's candid sense and a sense communication and attribute between a dual categorical characters is glorious as well.
I rarely suggest this array to any scholarship novella fan as this is unequivocally tip shelf sci-fi essay from a best. The array should be examination in sequence yet and one should start with a I, Robot brief story collection before move to The Caves of Steel (which is a prototype to this novel). Also this array is wholly suitable for any one of during slightest high propagandize age.
Bottom Line: This array was insubordinate when it came out in a 50's. It's still one of a best ones out there.
10 of 10 people found a following examination helpful.
Out of a caves, into a sunlight
By Paul E. Harrison
The Naked Sun is a supplement to The Caves of Steel, and like that is a investigator story set on a featuring robot-hating Plainclothesman Baley and, as if to infer Asimov unequivocally could envision a future, or movie-making of a '80s anyway, his wholly unsuited partner R Daneel Olivaw, a robot. Unlike CoS it's set on a (spacer) universe Solaria, a universe of few people and many, servile, robots.
I was a tiny unhappy after reading CoS, and was awaiting something of a arrange here, yet that didn't happen. CoS was set on an Earth that we found awkwardly described - we got a sense Asimov was perplexing to contend things about a approach people suspicion yet couldn't utterly get them out. No such problem with The Naked Sun, where Baley's future-Earth foibles are out in a open (figuratively and literally), and Asimov also successfully hints for a initial time that a paradise finished adult of a universe where all is finished for we and where people can live for hundreds of years may, possibly, be flawed, a topic that becomes stronger in "Robots of Dawn" and "Robots and Empire."
Asimov wrote that CoS was an try to answer a censor that it was unfit to mix a genres of scholarship novella with investigator stories. The Naked Sun is most some-more than an answer to that challenge, it's one of Asimov's beginning studies of humanity, and it's a good created entirely entertaining one during that.
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