cafard 3 days ago

I did read one out-and-out crime novel by Azimov. You will not be surprised to learn that the victim was graduate student in chemistry, the murder occurred in a laboratory, and the plot twist turned on something known chiefly to chemists.

(I've forgotten the title--I read the book nearer 50 than 40 years ago.)

Edit: I see from Wikipedia that it was The Death Dealers, later republished as A Whiff of Death.

dr_dshiv 3 days ago

He used the detective/crime dialogue format to deliver sci-fi.

rusticpenn 3 days ago

Are you being sarcastic? The Robot novels are basically crime novels with robots...

  • beacon294 a day ago

    There's actually a significant corpus of robot stories. However, I did forget that "I, Robot" does have a lot of crimes, investigations, and such.

    • rusticpenn a day ago

      I am talking about these for example

      The Caves of Steel (1954) - first Robot series/R. Daneel Olivaw novel

      The Naked Sun (1957) - second Robot series/R. Daneel Olivaw novel

      "Mirror Image" (1972) - short story about R. Daneel Olivaw and detective Elijah Baley

      The Robots of Dawn (1983) - third Robot series/R. Daneel Olivaw novel Robots and Empire (1985) - fourth Robot series/R. Daneel Olivaw novel

      • beacon294 13 hours ago

        Yeah I didn't really think of those as detective stories but it has been a few decades.

  • dsr_ 3 days ago

    It's not sarcasm: the conventional wisdom was that an SF novel could not also be a satisfying mystery/detective novel, because the readers could not guess that Aldebaranians can see in ultraviolet, or any other authorial invention.

    Asimov's insight was that it was up to the author to play rigorously fairly: every fact of consequence needed to be revealed naturally.

    • a_bonobo 3 days ago

      And that's what I love about the robot stories. He sets up the law of robotics, just like Agatha Christie and friends set up the detective fiction commandments, and then Asimov sets about finding all the loop holes in the laws of robotics. Every story is one loop-hole.

  • ghaff 3 days ago

    Also the Black Widower stories. I'm sure others as well.

cafard 3 days ago

I did read one out-and-out crime novel by Asimov. You will not be surprised to learn that the victim was graduate student in chemistry, the murder occurred in a laboratory, and the plot twist turned on something known chiefly to chemists.

(I've forgotten the title--I read the book nearer 50 than 40 years ago.)