I'm rediscovering Asimov for the first time since reading I, Robot as a kid, having just plowed through a beat-up used copy of Robot Visions.
I got myself a fresh new copy of Fantastic Voyage (having watched the film several years ago), and I'm loving how much more detailed and plausible Asimov's explanations are, particularly his solution for how the miniaturization process actually works.
One little thing got under my skin, though: Dr. Michaels (the Donald Pleasance character) is consistently referred to as the "Pilot", not the "Navigator".
Every time it comes up, I keep saying to myself, "Ummmm, no. The person at the controls is the Pilot, and the one working with the maps & charts is the Navigator."
In fact, I'm on page 76, and I have yet to see the words "navigator" or "navigate" in any context.
It bugged me so much that I went and got the movie, and right there in the briefing the General says, "Dr. Michaels is a circulatory specialist, and will act as your navigator."
So what was Asimov's glitch with that term?
Dunno why it bothers me so much, but it just does.
I got myself a fresh new copy of Fantastic Voyage (having watched the film several years ago), and I'm loving how much more detailed and plausible Asimov's explanations are, particularly his solution for how the miniaturization process actually works.
One little thing got under my skin, though: Dr. Michaels (the Donald Pleasance character) is consistently referred to as the "Pilot", not the "Navigator".
Every time it comes up, I keep saying to myself, "Ummmm, no. The person at the controls is the Pilot, and the one working with the maps & charts is the Navigator."
In fact, I'm on page 76, and I have yet to see the words "navigator" or "navigate" in any context.
It bugged me so much that I went and got the movie, and right there in the briefing the General says, "Dr. Michaels is a circulatory specialist, and will act as your navigator."
So what was Asimov's glitch with that term?
Dunno why it bothers me so much, but it just does.