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STARS LIKE DUST
  

STARS LIKE DUST (Mass Market Paperback)

by Isaac Asimov (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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3 used from CDN$ 39.19

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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3.8 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars A very good story, but not Foundation, Dec 16 2003
By Steven M. Balke Jr. (Ypsilanti, MI USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This series is not as good as the Robot series or the Foundation series (probably why it is not in print and the other two are), but it certainly is a good story and a must fof the person who wishes to read the entire Asimov saga from begining to end. Find this book wherever you can and give it a read.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Classic SF, Jan 27 2002
By Paul E. Harrison (Stuart, FL) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
"The Stars, Like Dust" is either the first or second novel, chronologically, in Asimov's Empire Series, depending on whether you believe the consensus (first) or Asimov's Author's Note in Prelude to Foundation (second). Nonetheless, it probably doesn't matter a great deal, the other contender "The Currents of Space" has Trantor as just another would-be empire, and this novel doesn't see any need to bring Trantor into the story. In all other respects too, there's little to connect either book, no common characters, political forces, no anything, beyond a shared past where Earth is radioactive. So read either book in any order you wish. In case it hasn't been hammered in yet, the Empire books form the middle of Asimov's Robots-Empire-Foundation universe timeline.

Beyond that, this is a nice piece of SF that George Lucas wouldn't have trouble making a film around. It's the old story - Boy loses father in confusing circumstances, boy goes to take what is rightfully his and possibly avenge his father's murder at the same time, boy is being chased by mysterious murderous groups, boy meets girl, boy and girl hate each other, boy and girl fall in love... well, ok, it's not the old story, it's half a dozen old stories in one, but it's a good thriller and mystery with enough twists and turns to please anyone.

It's also mercifully short, the characters are fleshed out in a most unasimovian way, and the science is there but not stupifyingly overbearing. My edition includes an apology at the end from the master about his assumption that a lifeless planet would have an oxygen-rich CO2-free atmosphere, and while I know roughly which part of the book is being refered to, it wasn't a big deal.

In all, I think I prefered The Currents of Space, but there's no reason to read one in favour of the other rather than read both. If you can find a copy, and you're after some intelligent light entertainment, you could do worse than read this.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Not too bad, but not Asimov's best, April 30 2001
By G. Swift "97jedi" (Southwestern Missouri) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
As the first Empire novel, this introduces us to the state of the colonized galaxy far in the future, after the events of the Robot novels have played themselves out.

The Earth is a radioactive cauldron, inhabited only in carefully chosen locales. A student near to graduating is suddenly thrust into danger as a bomb is discoverd in his closet. It becomes clear that it must have been placed by the same faction that arranged for the death of his father, a prominent political figure.

This young man is thus forced to flee Earth and seek assistance from a contemporary of his father, one who may be able to offer him asylum from his pursuers. Of course, though, Asimov makes sure that things in life are never easy, as we can all relate. Refused assistance, he must flee still further, with the skein becoming more tangled as the chase proceeds.

Eventually, he deduces the murderer's identity, and a confrontation must follow. The result helps set the stage for a human Galactic Empire, begun in Robots and Empire, in which the source of Earth's radioactive nature was initiated, paving the way for galactic colonization, and in fact forcing humans to leave Earth as it became more uninhabitable. It is interesting that Asimov was able to incorporate all three of his epic series into a single long narrative of future history.

As the first Empire novel, this book is nevertheless not the most necessary for continuity of the storyline, but it is still worth the read.

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4.0 out of 5 stars The least of the Empire novels
It is really an enormous tragedy that so many of Isaac Asimov's greatest Science Fiction works remain out of print. The three 'Empire' novels by Asimov are a great example. Read more
Published on May 31 2000 by Peter Dykhuis

3.0 out of 5 stars It is a good book, considering it's from 1951.
Asimov himself was dissatisfied with this because of a subplot the editor made him tack on the end, but I still found it overall amusing and entertaining. Read more
Published on Jul 7 1999

4.0 out of 5 stars Asimov's Least Favorite Book Is Still A Good Read
this was asimov's least favorite book, however I think it is a good novel. I don't like the extra plot adout the secret document and it dosn't fit the story but this one detail... Read more
Published on Jan 23 1999 by kwolff@chorus.net

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