Okay, if people with dyslexia can't read or write, who's been ghostwriting for Stephen King all these decades?
According to
this list, Octavia Butler and Samuel R. Delaney have also had to deal with dyslexia. I'm sure you recognize all three of those names, right?
So you won't have seen the original version of Cosmos. What a shame, as I prefer it to the updated version (of course it's reasonable to update the information, but they had to change out some of the music). Which episode is your favorite?
Why should Asimov be considered a "guilty pleasure"?
What did you think of his essays and autobiography?
I guess Jules Verne and H.G. Wells had nothing at all to do with any foundations of science fiction, then?
The Golden Age of Science Fiction is an interesting article. It's obvious that there are differing ideas of exactly when this age is thought to be.
Well, I'm not quite the reading prodigy you claim to be (I wasn't taught to read until I was 4, and didn't read any science fiction until a few years later).
I got into it seriously though, at age 12, and Asimov had quite an influence. I spent a lot of hours enjoying his essay collections, which confused the hell out of my classmates when I'd read them during our free reading time in school. They couldn't fathom why anyone would read a science book for
fun.
Anyway, that was nearly 43 years ago, and it's impossible to condense it down into one or two forum posts as to how influential some of these authors and their works have been on my life.