Psychohistorical Crisis

Psychohistorical Crisis  

First edition jacket art
Author(s) Donald Kingsbury
Cover artist Donato Giancola
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Science fiction
Publisher Tor Books
Publication date December 2001
Media type Print (Hardcover & Paperback)
Pages 511 pp (first edition hardcover)
ISBN ISBN 0-312-86102-8 (first edition hardcover)
OCLC Number 47296021
Dewey Decimal 813/.54 21
LC Classification PR9199.3.K44226 P77 2001
Preceded by The Moon Goddess and the Son

Psychohistorical Crisis is a science fiction novel by Donald Kingsbury, published by Tor Books in 2001. An expansion of his 1995 novella "Historical Crisis", it is a re-imagining of the world of Isaac Asimov's Foundation trilogy, set after the establishment of the Second Empire.

Review by Peter Cannon, ASSOCIATE EDITOR and Jeff Zaleski, FORECASTS EDITOR....

"Admirers of Isaac Asimov's Foundation Trilogy, possibly the greatest SF series ever, will be drawn to this oddly titled sequel from the author of the Hugo-nominated Courtship Rite (1982), but they shouldn't get their hopes too high. No one, including Asimov himself in his belated efforts to further milk his cash cow, has succeeded in capturing the breadth, excitement and imaginative scope of the original. Canadian Kingsbury, too, falls short. Nearly as long as the entire Asimov trilogy, this continuation suffers from long-windedness and a surfeit of italics. The author, though, does create a convincing and fresh simulacrum of the world of the 761st century. For a crime he can't remember, Eron Osa, a 30-year-old psychohistorian, must give up his fam, that is, his personal familiar, a device plugged into his brain that immeasurably enhances all aspects of his life, particularly his power to absorb and resolve problems. Members of the Second Galactic Empire populate the Milky Way galaxy of a million worlds, in which the only "aliens" are genetically engineered talking dogs. Some people, not much different from today's humans, behave admirably, while others are addicted to power and war. Women play only peripheral roles in a male-dominated universe. For all its ambitions, this work lacks the great storytelling qualities of Asimov's trilogy and captures only some of its ambience."

Psychohistorical Crisis was the 2002 winner of the Prometheus Award.

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