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posted by [personal profile] mylescorcoran at 09:10am on 19/03/2008 under , ,
As a kid I loved both Islands in the Sky and Dolphin Island, and re-read them many times. I thought I hadn't read a lot of Clarke's fiction, or certainly not a large proportion of it, but looking at his bibliography now I realise I've read a good few earlier works and remember most of them fondly.

He saw wonder and beauty in the natural world and wrote his damnedest to share something of that awe with the rest of us. His work formed the steady shoulders many who followed him planted their feet on to see further.

Damn.
There are 3 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] viktor-haag.livejournal.com at 01:00pm on 19/03/2008
Through a large part of my teen years, Islands in the Sky was a comfort book that I read regularly every summer when my family or I went camping. I had an old, battered paperback copy from the sixties, I think. I don't know whether it was from my parents' bookshelf, or whether I picked it up at a used bookstore or something. I haven't read it in years, and I haven't really read anything else long by Clarke (other than 2001), although I have read some of his short stories.

I'm pretty sure that Islands in the Sky was my introduction to proper science fiction, which led me to Heinlein and James White. I saw "proper science fiction" because I read a number of "Boy's Life" type stories way before reading the Clarke (i.e. the "Mad Scientist Club" series, the "Alvin Fernald" series, the "Danny Dunn" series, the "Great Brain" series), and their emphasis on science and "popular mechanics" often had tinges of science fiction to them.

mylescorcoran: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] mylescorcoran at 03:12pm on 19/03/2008
I had a Puffin edition (the very purple one from this set with the cartoon wheel-shaped space station). I read it until it fell apart, I think.
 
posted by [identity profile] viktor-haag.livejournal.com at 05:21pm on 19/03/2008
 Cool; mine was this one.

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