No worries.Hey, sorry man, that was unintentional.

No worries.Hey, sorry man, that was unintentional.
About 100 pages into 'Star Trek: The Art of the Impossible'. Once again, KRAD is delivering an awesome story
Currently reading "Caliban", by Roger MacBride Allen. It is an Isaac Asimov Robot novel.
Byron Preiss Visual Publications licensed the rights to do books based on Asimov's Robot cycle back in the late 1980s and early 1990s. There were three six-book series, ROBOT CITY, ROBOTS AND ALIENS, and ROBOTS IN TIME, with novels by Bruce Bethke, Rob Chilson, Arthur Byron Cover, Stephen Leigh, Michael P. Kube-McDowell, Mike McQuay, Jerry Oltion, Cordell Scottsen, Robert Thurston, and William F. Wu. Then there was the "Caliban" trilogy by Roger MacBride Allen, which included CALIBAN, INFERNO, and UTOPIA. (I edited the last three ROBOTS IN TIME books and UTOPIA when I was working for Byron.) All of them were titled with Asimov's name as a possessive (e.g., ISAAC ASIMOV'S ROBOT CITY: CYBORG by William F. Wu, or ISAAC ASIMOV'S UTOPIA by Roger MacBride Allen).Currently reading "Caliban", by Roger MacBride Allen. It is an Isaac Asimov Robot novel.
Huh. I thought I'd read all of Asimov's Robot and Federation novels, but somehow I had no idea this existed.
Since my last post I finished Christopher L. Bennett's Only Superhuman. I really enjoyed and would definitely read any sequels, or anything else set in the same universe.
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