Kirkus Star
THE KIRKUS STAR
Awarded to Books of Exceptional Merit

BROWSE BOOK REVIEWS




Grand Masters of Sci Fi & Fantasy Part 2


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Cover art for FOUNDATION
FICTION
Released: Aug. 30, 1951

"The story of this colony's survival and eventual command of the broken empire sustains the narrative which is- this time-better science than fiction."
First of a three-book series covering the world of remote tomorrows, the effectiveness of this first volume is curtailed by its attempt to cover more than a century in time with its many generations of characters. Read full book review >
Cover art for THE END OF ETERNITY
FICTION
Released: Aug. 25, 1955

"Combinations and permutations by the dozen."
Time theories set the story of Technician Harlan's journeys upwhen and down-when until he meets Noys Lambent who cracks his observer's objectivity. Read full book review >
Cover art for I, ROBOT
FICTION
Released: Aug. 16, 1963

A new edition of the by now classic collection of affiliated stories which has already established its deserved longevity. Read full book review >
Cover art for THE GODS THEMSELVES
FICTION
Released: May 5, 1972

"Asimov's following will enjoy the innovative clutter of math, physics, and those oozy para-Universe "Soft Ones," but articulated speculations proceed at a long, slow crawl."
Asimov's first full-length science fiction novel in 15 years features an impossible glut of protons, called "Plutonium-186," starter for a two-way energy-flow project between Earth and a parallel universe. Read full book review >
Cover art for RENDEZVOUS WITH RAMA
FICTION
Released: Sept. 7, 1973

"A perfect science fiction novel."
Only superlatives will do for Arthur Clarke's dazzlingly polished, wonderfully original exploration of a gigantic alien space ship that passes briefly through the solar system on its way to an unimaginable destination. Read full book review >
Cover art for THE FOUNTAINS OF PARADISE
FICTION
Released: Jan. 29, 1978

"Not much of a novel, but the idea is one of Clarke's most captivating."
Characteristic Clarke—and parts of it are excellent. Read full book review >