Reading Guides

Home buttonOverview buttonSubject Matter buttonAuthor Profiles buttonFiction GuidesMedia Guides buttonResources button

"Nightfall "
by Isaac Asimov

Publishing DataPreviewBackgroundNavigation GuideFurther Exploration
Publishing Data

Originally published in Astounding, September 1941
Collected in The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume I


Horizontal Rule
Preview
Every 2050 years on the planet Lagash five of its six suns set simultaneously and the sixth goes into a total solar eclipse. As a result, civilization collapses. On the eve of one such collapse, the journalist Theremon 762 is covering an attempt by a band of scientists to stave off this inevitable disaster.
Horizontal Rule
Background
  • Voted Best Science Fiction Story of All Time in a poll conducted by the Science Fiction Writers of America
  • John Clute's Illustrated History of Science Fiction calls "Nightfall" the single most popular science fiction short story ever published.

Asimov had by this time published 31 short stories. John W. Campbell was Asimov's hero and mentor, and Asimov always tried to sell his stories to Campbell first.

On March 17, 1941, Asimov went to Campbell and pitched a story idea that Campbell rejected, not because it was such a bad idea, but because the Emerson quotation was obsessing him.

In this now-famous conversation, Campbell brought up the Emerson quotation (from "Nature") which eventually became the story's epigraph. Campbell asked Asimov what he thought would happen if the stars behaved in such a fashion. In his autobiography Asimov says he drew a blank, and Campbell remarked "I think [men] would go mad. I want you to write a story about that." Asimov went home and wrote the story.

In a column printed in his own magazine in April 1986 Asimov suggested that Campbell had read a nonfiction discussion of that same Emerson quotation in the magazine Sky in 1937; since Campbell himself did not seem to know the origin of the quotation, Asimov may be right.

Over Asimov's objections Campbell added the references to Earth at the very end of the story.

Campbell paid Asimov a bonus for the story. "Nightfall" was Asimov's fifth sale to Campbell and his first cover story.

Horizontal Rule
Navigation Guide
Explain the science behind the story. Why does civilization collapse? How is the civilization built up again?
At what level of scientific, astronomical and technological knowledge does the planet seem to be at? Of what significance is the discovery of the Laws of Gravitation? What are the scientists attempting to do?
How far off the mark are the scientists with their predictions?
Why are the people so afraid of the darkness?
Describe the beliefs of the Cultists. What is the relationship between the Cultists and the scientists? Why do the Cultists want to disrupt the scientists' experiments?
What really causes the populace to go mad?
Why don't science, skill, and knowledge win out over ignorance and superstition?
Examine the relationship between the Emerson quotation and the story.
Discuss the way the story illustrates the fear of the unknown.
The story is actually a mystery to be solved. Note that the word "nightfall" never actually appears in the story itself.
"Nightfall" is not a particularly literary story; nor is it Asimov's favorite; yet its most important element--its subject, the relationship of man to the universe--is the most significant theme explored by science fiction in the Golden Age of John W. Campbell.
Discuss the opposite forces of reason (as embodied by the scientists) and religion (as embodied by the Cultists.
Note that the populace of Lagash suffers from fear of the dark and from claustrophobia (fear of closed-in spaces). Asimov himself suffered from severe acrophobia (fear of heights; fear of falling) and mild agoraphobia (fear of open spaces). His first two Robot novels (The Naked Sun and The Caves of Steel) also deal with agoraphobia.
 
 
Horizontal Rule
Further Exploration
In 1990 Asimov and Robert Silverberg expanded the story into a full-length novel that was published to generally poor reviews.
 
Top of Page
 
Browse by Author Browse by Title Browse by Subgenre Browse by Topic Browse by Anthology
Browse by Award
Home Overview Subject Matter Author Profiles Fiction Guides Media Guides Resources