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Asimov's Mysteries by Isaac Asimov

lordofthemoon's review against another edition

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4.0

This book is science fiction of the old school: where characters are there purely to drive the plot, but the plot hinges on some extrapolation of actual science. I'd forgotten how much I enjoy this sort of thing. Don't get me wrong, I've really started to appreciate more sociological and character-driven SF, but this is the stuff I grew up on, with all its strengths and flaws.

Asimov presents thirteen of his science fiction short stories, all with a mystery theme to them. Several of them feature Wendell Urth, an "extraterrologist" with extreme agoraphobia, who has never travelled further than he can walk. And yet, he has a detailed knowledge of the worlds outside of Earth and uses this to help the police solve crimes from around the solar system. Some of the stories are funny (a two page shaggy dog story that was there purely to set up a pun had me cackling), some are serious. There's a spy story that seems like it's inspired by James Bond, except that the author says he wrote it before he'd heard of Bond. And the final story in the collection: The Billiard Ball is the only whodunnit I've read in which the key to the mystery involves general relativity!

As ever, Asimov's own words on his stories are part of the fun. He provides fore- and/or afterwords on each story, with a bit of history or context, and his authorial voice is charming. I do wish I could have met the man.

I thoroughly enjoyed this collection, but, as ever with SF of this era, YMMV. There are almost no women to speak of and there's not much in the way of depth of characterisation. But if you want a set of solid whodunnits, in an SF context, you can't go far wrong with this.