Asimov These Guys Are Not...
I'm nearing the end of the main body of Sci Fi work of Isaac Asimov. I've now consumed the Foundation Series (7 books), The Empire Triology (3 books I had to track down used since they're out of print), The Robot Triology, several of the robot shortstory books, and Robots & Empire (the book to tie Robots, Empire and Foundation together). Not to mention a few of the not quite integrated works (though hinted at in his later Foundation books); Nemesis, The Gods Themselves and End of Eternety. That's nearly 20 books!
Asimov, to me, is the equivalent of Tolkien in the Science Fiction world. His work is the pillar upon which so much sci fi today is built up from. It is sad, now that I am almost through his works, that there aren't any comparable works out there. No one has come close to continuing what he started.
When I go to the bookstore, I see row after row of Star Wars, Star Trek, Warhammer 40k etc... novels. Mass-produced works based on an established story and universe. I enjoy these a fair bit, but since there are dozens of authors contributing into a single series, there is little sense of continuity. Also, each book is an attempt to write the ULTIMATE confrontation for that setting. Well, after 500 or so ULTIMATE confrontations in Star Wars, they lose their meaning. The empire can only make a comeback so many times, the jedi can only come within inches of falling so many times, and rogue squadron can only single-handedly turn so many battles before it becomes worn and tired.
Asimov succeeded because his works (though they were many) were individual pieces of a vast and complex history. From the founding of US Robotics and Mechanical Men in the late 20th Century, to the establishment of a Galactic Empire to the finaly birth of a galaxy-wide Gaia, Asimovs work wove a detailed tapestry, adding a piece here, a short story there, tossing in a full novel from time to time. We are given a series of heroes (Susan Calvin, Elijah Baley, R. Daneel Olivaw, (to some extent R. Giskard Relentov), Gladia of Solaria, Hari Seldon, and then the slew of figures from the First and Second Foundations working towards a Second Galactic Empire) that all play their individual pieces in the grand story (with R. Daneel being the only consistent one throughout), coming and going as needed. The series is not confined by a particular period of time, nor by a central all-important character that dominates each story. To me, this is what a good science fiction series should be about. We're dealing with such vast expanses of space, why are we limited to so few players and so short a period of time? The power here is in unfolding events and stories that impact an entire Galaxy... and that takes a lot of people and a lot of time.
What happened to that? Where did the "Epic" aspect of Sci-Fi go to? Star Trek and Star Wars were great because they told a large story, but now in the aftermath of these two, we are faced with a flood of people adding in a little piece here and there into the existing framework, hardly extending it at all. Where before we read of conflicts that spanned entire sections of the galaxy, we're focusing in on individual skirmishes and military campaigns. Amidst a virtually limitless setting we spend our time focused on the insanely finite.
Lately it seems, when it comes to movies and TV, we're limited to retelling old stories or rehashing the old ideas. Battlestar Galactica, while an interesting remake, is just that... a remake. We've run out of Star Trek for the time being (though many will argue we haven't had real Trek since TNG). Babylon 5 came to an end, Firefly was given the axe, Quantum Leap died a long time ago (though that was barely Sci Fi). Most of the stuff on the Sci Fi channel (in terms of originals at least) are B Critter Flicks, not much sci-fi there. What they do have is once again remakes/poor extensions (never got into the Stargate spin-offs). The only real sci-fi we see in the theaters right now are the Star Wars prequels. While they're not that great in terms of acting, they're at least telling a large epic story (From Old Republic, to Empire, to New Republic).
We're seeing a resurgance of interest in fantasy (LOTR), comic books (Spiderman, Punisher, Hellboy, Batman etc...), why not good sci-fi? We came close with The Matrix, but parts 2 and 3 fell down on the job there, which was a shame because the first was so good.
Are there any up-and-coming sci-fi writers out there? Promising tv show ideas? Anything?