2. • Arthur Clarke is famous
for being a co-writer of the
screen play for the 1968
films. His famous books
are:
• Childhoods End
• A Space Odyssey
• Rendezvous with Rama
• The Fountains of
Paradise.
• He was born on 16
December 1967 in
England.
• He died in 2008, In
3. • Childhood's End is a
1953 science
fiction novel by the
British author Arthur C.
Clarke. The story
follows the
peaceful alien
invasion[1]of Earth by
the mysterious
Overlords, whose arrival
begins decades of
apparent utopia under i
ndirect alien rule, at the
cost of human identity
and culture.
4. • Isaac Asimov was born on
January 2 1990. was
an Russian-
American writer and
professor
of biochemistry at Boston
University. He was known
for his works of science
fiction and popular
science. Asimov was
a prolific writer, and wrote
or edited more than 500
books and an estimated
90,000 letters
and postcards.He died in
April 6th 1992.
5. • FOUNDATION begins a
new chapter in the story
of man's future. As the
Old Empire crumbles
into barbarism
throughout the million
worlds of the galaxy,
Hari Seldon and his
band of psychologists
must create a new
entity, the Foundation-
dedicated to art,
science, and technology
6. • Philip Kindred Dick was
born in Chicago in
December 1928. Dick
became a published
author in 1952. His first
sale was the short story
"Roog." His first novel,
"Solar Lottery," appeared
in 1955. Dick produced an
astonishing amount of
material during the 1950s
and 1960s.He died on
March 2, 1982 in Santa
Ana, California, USA
because of a heart failure.
7. • o Androids Dream of
Electric Sheep? in
some later printings) is
a science fiction novel
by American writer
Philip K. Dick, first
published in 1968. The
novel is set in a post-
apocalyptic San
Francisco, where
Earth's life has been
greatly damaged by
nuclear global war.
8. • William Gibson described
November 9th, the day after
the 2016 presidential
election, as a “really weird
and powerful sensation.”
Like many in the science
fiction community, he had
anticipated that Democratic
candidate Hillary Clinton
would beat her opponent
Donald Trump. In the
months after Trump was
elected, he began to explore
his feelings as he wrote his
next
novel, Agency, according
to The New York Times.
9. • Neuromancer is a 1984
science fiction novel by
American-Canadian
writer William Gibson. It is
one of the best-known works
in the cyberpunk genre and
the first novel to win
the Nebula Award, the Philip
K. Dick Award, and the Hugo
Award.[1] It was
Gibson's debut novel and
the beginning of the Sprawl
trilogy. The novel tells the
story of a washed-
up computer hacker hired by
a mysterious employer to
pull off the ultimate hack.
10. • Jules Gabriel Verne was
a French author who
pioneered the genre of
science-fiction. He is
best known for his
novels Journey to the
Center of the
Earth (1864), Twenty
Thousand Leagues
Under the Sea (1870),
and Around the World in
Eighty Days (1873).
11. • round the World in Eighty
Days (French: Le tour du
monde en quatre-vingts jours)
is a classic adventure novel by
the French writerJules Verne,
published in 1873. In the
story, Phileas
Fogg of London and his newly
employed French valet Passep
artout attempt
to circumnavigate the world in
80 days on a £20,000 wager
(the approximate equivalent of
£2 million in 2016) set by his
friends at the Reform Club. It is
one of Verne's most acclaimed
works.