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Isaac Asimov
Isaac Asimov (born Isaak Yudovich Ozimov; January 2, 1920 – April 6, 1992) was a Russian-born American author and professor of biochemistry. Regarded as one of the "Big Three" science fiction writers alongside Robert A. Heinlein and Arthur C. Clarke, Asimov authored or edited over 500 books and approximately 380 short stories across science fiction, mystery, and non-fiction. His seminal contributions include the Foundation series, which explores psychohistory and the decline of galactic empires, and the introduction of the Three Laws of Robotics in his 1942 short story "Runaround." Asimov earned a Ph.D. in biochemistry from Columbia University in 1948 and taught at Boston University School of Medicine, where he became an associate professor in 1955, though his writing career overshadowed his academic output. His personal life drew posthumous scrutiny for admitted lecherous behavior toward women, including propositions and groping at conventions, as detailed in accounts from associates and his own writings.
Isaac Asimov was born Isaak Yudovich Ozimov around January 2, 1920—the exact date uncertain due to lack of official records from post-revolutionary Russia, with possible dates ranging from October 1919 to January 1920, though he celebrated January 2—in the rural shtetl of Petrovichi , located in the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (now in Smolensk Oblast , Russia , near the Belarus border), to Anna Rachel Berman Asimov and Judah Asimov, both of whom were Jewish millers. His early childhood occurred amid the instability following the Russian Revolution and Civil War, including economic hardship and antisemitic pogroms that affected Jewish communities in the region. In 1921, Asimov contracted double pneumonia during a local epidemic that afflicted 16 other children in Petrovichi ; he was the sole survivor among them, an event his family attributed to medical intervention by a visiting doctor.
The Asimov family's decision to emigrate stemmed from the ongoing Red Terror , political repression, and deteriorating conditions under Bolshevik rule, which prompted many Jews to flee Soviet Russia in the early 1920s . After the birth of Asimov's sister Marcia in 1922, his father Judah arranged the move, departing Petrovichi in late 1922 and traveling via Liverpool , England , aboard the RMS Baltic . The family arrived at Ellis Island on February 3, 1923, when Asimov was three years old, marking their entry into the United States as immigrants seeking stability.
Upon settling in Brooklyn, New York, the Asimovs faced initial poverty in the Yiddish-speaking Jewish immigrant enclave of East New York, where Judah and Anna operated a small candy and soda shop to make ends meet. This abrupt shift from the rural, Yiddish-Hebrew influenced shtetl life in Soviet Russia to the urban, English-dominant environment of 1920s America exposed young Asimov to rapid cultural assimilation, including learning English from street interactions and pulp magazines stocked in the family store, while his parents primarily spoke Yiddish at home. The family's naturalization as U.S. citizens followed in 1928, solidifying their American roots amid the challenges of immigrant adaptation.
Isaac Asimov was born around January 2, 1920 (exact date uncertain), in Petrovichi, a small village in Russia (now Belarus), to Judah Asimov, a socialist-leaning miller, and Anna Rachel Berman Asimov, members of a Jewish family facing pogroms and economic instability under Bolshevik rule. The family immigrated to the United States in September 1923, settling in Brooklyn, New York, where Judah, barred from accounting work by limited English proficiency, invested in a modest candy store on Essex Street, later expanding to several locations amid frequent relocations within the borough.
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