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Collier books: Science for everyone,

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About Author

Isaac Asimov

Asimov was born sometime between October 4, 1919 and January 2, 1920 in Petrovichi in Smolensk Oblast, RSFSR (now Russia), the son of a Jewish family of millers. Although his exact date of birth is uncertain, Asimov himself celebrated it on January 2. His family emigrated to Brooklyn, New York and opened a candy store when he was three years old. He taught himself to read at the age of five. He began reading the science fiction pulp magazines that his family's store carried. Around the age of eleven, he began to write his own stories, and by age nineteen, he was selling them to the science fiction magazines. He graduated from Columbia University in 1939. He married Gertrude Blugerman in 1942. During World War II he worked as a civilian at the Philadelphia Navy Yard's Naval Air Experimental Station. After the war, he returned to Columbia University and earned a Ph.D. in biochemistry in 1948. He then joined the faculty of the Boston University School of Medicine until 1958, when he became a full-time writer. His first novel, [Pebble in the Sky]( was published in 1950. He and his wife divorced in 1973, and he married Janet O. Jeppson the same year. He was a highly prolific writer, having written or edited more than 500 books and an estimated 9,000 letters and postcards.

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Books in this Series

The kingdom of the sun

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This is Asimov’s first foray into the history of astronomy (at least, at book length), and is, like all the Abelard-Schuman science juveniles, a top-notch job. Here he outlines the advancing knowledge of the solar system from ancient times through the 1950’s. There is much not touched on here—indeed, it is largely an account of observations of the solar systems, planetary positions and satellite counts, and little about the physical nature of the planets or their moons. Still, what is here is interesting, is clearly explained, and is a good introduction to much of the history of astronomy for the young reader. Unfortunately, astronomy is a science which has advanced enormously in the last thirty-five years. (Indeed, the book ends with the vision of men on the moon in a few years, and rockets exploring the planets, leading to all sorts of exciting discoveries, which has definitely come to pass.) As a result, Asimov’s astronomy books suffer more from being out-dated than many of his other non-fiction books, and this one in particular misses out on all the exciting things which have been found since 1960. There is little here which later observations have proven actually wrong, and as a history, it still passes muster, so this is not a book to be avoided by any means—but neither, alas, is it a completely current introduction to the adventure of discovering the solar system.