Addendum: I was thinking about this story this morning. Asimov has a substantial section where Bailey and R. Daneel go back and forth on the topic of the value of the individual as opposed to what might benefit the collective. I haven't read enough Asimov to know whether this might be a recurring ...
Isaac Asimov had opinions on everything, and he'd often find ways to insert them into his books. I was reminded of Caves a couple of months ago when I read Margaret Atwood's The Robber Bride, which is in many ways an updated version of the Jezebel story from I Kings. Atwood gives Jezebel a rough rid...
It's a murder mystery where the crime-solvers are a human cop and a robot. It's brilliant. And Asimov only plays fair with his mysteries: he gives you all the info you need to solve it yourself.
It's a murder mystery where the crime-solvers are a human cop and a robot. It's brilliant. And Asimov only plays fair with his mysteries: he gives you all the info you need to solve it yourself.
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