Isaac Asimov's "Foundation Trilogy" is one of the high-water marks of
science fiction. It pioneered many of the familiar themes of modern SF,
and the sheer sweep of his "future history" shaped many if not most of
the writers who followed him.
With the permission -- and blessing -- of the Asimov estate, three of
today's bestselling SF writers, Gregory Benford, Greg Bear and David
Brin, have conspired (like the original Foundation!) to complete the
epic saga the beloved Grand Master left unfinished.
The acclaimed Second Foundation Trilogy continues with Greg Bear's
"Foundation and Chaos, " the gripping new novel about a galaxy-wide
power struggle within the ranks of the robots that have served and
protected humankind for 20 centuries.
Hari Seldon, frail and full of years, is on trial for daring to predict
the Empire's fall, and the time has come for the long-anticipated
migration to Star's End. But R. Daneel Olivaw, the brilliant robot
entrusted with this great mission, has discovered a potential enemy,
even deadlier than the figurehead Emperor's brutal minions.
One of his own.
Humaniform robot Lodovik Trema is the only survivor of a bizarre
insterstellar accident. Exposed to a neutrino storm, his positronic
brain has apparently erased the holographic template of the Three Laws
of Robotics. If this is true, Lodovic's service to humankind is no
longer a question of destiny, but of will, and therefore, no longer
absolute.
Daneel needs Lodovic, so he sends him to Eos, the legendary secret
planet where the robots perfect their service to humankind. And Lodovic
says he is healed. Yet, can he be trusted, when stirrings of discontent
are arising all over the galaxy? Other robotsare questioning their
mission -- and Daneel's strategy.
And humans, too. Hidden in the steel caves of Trantor, sought by
loyalist and rebel alike, is an obscure heatsink worker's daughter, a
girl whose amazing mental powers are also the result of disaster: the
deadly human malady known as Brain Fever. Young Klia Asgar's awesome but
unwanted psychic abilities promise to join man and robot in a common
destiny... or a mutual destruction.