Azazel (Asimov) Explained

Azazel is a character created by Isaac Asimov and featured in a series of fantasy short stories. Azazel is a two-centimeter-tall demon (or extraterrestrial), named after the Biblical demon.

Some of these stories were collected in Azazel, first published in 1988. The stories take the form of conversations between an unnamed writer (whom Asimov identifies in the collection introduction as himself) and a shiftless friend named George (named in "The Two-Centimeter Demon" as George Bitternut). At these meetings George tells how he is able to conjure up Azazel and their adventures together. George's greatest goal in life is a free lunch (or dinner, or ride, etc.), but Azazel is constrained so that he cannot directly benefit George. George can only call upon Azazel for favors to various friends, which invariably go awry. The stories' theme about a demon or alien that grants wishes echoes an earlier work by Lester del Rey, titled "No Strings Attached"[1] from 1954.

"Getting Even" (1980) was the first story featuring Azazel, and was also the first "Union Club Mystery". Asimov stated that this story was omitted from both The Union Club Mysteries (1983) and the Azazel collection because it did not match the later stories in either series.[2] However, it does appear in another anthology, Tales from the Spaceport Bar.[3] [4]

"Perfectly Formal" (1991) was a story within a story, purportedly written by a robot called Cal. It appeared in a story (also called "Cal") about a robot who learns to write stories. "Cal" appeared in the collection Gold.

Short story collection

The introduction of this book describes how Asimov came to create Azazel, with an explanation about how the stories and book came to be published. Stories included are:

List of stories

Most of the Azazel stories originally appeared in magazines, such as Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact, and Gallery. Besides the Azazel collection, a number of the stories featuring George and Azazel appear in other Asimov collections including The Winds of Change and Other Stories, Science Fiction by Asimov, The Asimov Chronicles, Magic, and as part of the "Cal" story in the Gold collection.

width=25%Titlewidth=25%First published inwidth=25%Year/Monthwidth=25%Collection appears in
"Getting Even"Gallery1980/08(Anthology) Tales from the Spaceport Bar, George H. Scithers and Darrell Schweitzer, eds. Avon (pbk.), January 1987
"One Night of Song"The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction1982/04 Azazel and The Winds of Change and Other Stories
"To the Victor"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1982/07 Azazel
"The Dim Rumble"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1982/10Azazel and Science Fiction by Asimov
"The Smile That Loses" The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction1982/11Azazel and The Winds of Change and Other Stories
"Saving Humanity"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1983/09Azazel and The Asimov Chronicles
"A Matter of Principle"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1984/02Azazel
"The Evil Drink Does" Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1984/05Azazel
"Writing Time"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1984/07Azazel
"Dashing Through the Snow" Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1984/12Azazel and Science Fiction by Asimov
"Logic Is Logic"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1985/08Azazel
"He Travels the Fastest"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1985/11Azazel
"The Eye of the Beholder" Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1986/01Azazel and The Asimov Chronicles
"More Things in Heaven and Earth"Science Fiction by Asimov[5] 1986/NAAzazel
"The Mind's Construction"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1986/10Azazel
"The Fights of Spring"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1987/02Azazel
"Galatea"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1987/12Azazel
"Flight of Fancy"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1988/05Azazel
"The Two-Centimeter Demon"Azazel1988/NAAzazel
"I Love Little Pussy"[6] Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1988/11The Asimov Chronicles
"The Mad Scientist"Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact1989/07Magic
"To Your Health"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1989/08Magic
"Wine Is a Mocker"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1990/07Magic
"The Time Traveler"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1990/11 Magic
"Baby, It's Cold Outside"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1991/06Magic
"It's a Job"Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine1991/12Magic
"The Critic on the Hearth"Asimov's Science Fiction1992/11Magic
"March Against the Foe"Asimov's Science Fiction1994/04Magic
"Perfectly Formal"[7] "Cal" [8] [9] 1991/NAGold

Sources

Notes

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gutenberg.org/files/32395/32395-h/32395-h.htm No Strings Attached by Lester del Rey
  2. Azazel, Introduction
  3. http://www.asimovonline.com/oldsite/uc_story_list.html List of Union Club Mysteries
  4. Tales from the Spaceport Bar, George H. Scithers and Darrell Schweitzer, eds. Avon (pbk.), January 1987
  5. later reprinted in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine in 1993/11
  6. http://www.asimovonline.com/oldsite/azazel_story_list.html#I%20Love%20Little%20Pussy Asimovonline.com
  7. "Perfectly Formal" is listed as being written by Euphrosyne Durando, a pseudonym of the main story's character, Cal, in the book Gold by Isaac Asimov section 3 of the story "Cal".
  8. http://preem.tejat.net/~tseng/Asimov/Books/Book468.html Mention of Cal as a book - John H. Jenkins
  9. http://preem.tejat.net/~tseng/Asimov/Stories/Story419.html Mention of Azazel in Cal story - John H. Jenkins