Foundation and Empire cover

Foundation and Empire

Foundation (Publication Order) • Book 2

by Isaac Asimov

Narrated by Scott Brick

4.43 ABR Score (237.9K ratings)
★ 4.22 Goodreads (228.2K) ★ 4.63 Audible (9.6K)
9h 33m Released 2010 Sci-Fi

Why Listen to This Audiobook?

Asimov spent more words on ideas than action, yet somehow Scott Brick makes nine hours of galactic politics feel like a thriller.

  • Great if you want: epic sci-fi that rewards patience and civilizational-scale thinking
  • Listening experience: cerebral and measured, builds to a genuinely surprising second half
  • Narration: Brick's measured authority fits the historical-epic register perfectly
  • Skip if: you prefer character intimacy over civilizational-scale plotting

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About This Audiobook

Centuries after psychohistorian Hari Seldon established his Foundation to preserve civilization through the galaxy's inevitable dark age, the young republic faces its greatest existential threat yet. The dying Galactic Empire, though weakened by corruption and decay, still commands vast military resources and refuses to accept its prophesied demise quietly. As Foundation leaders navigate treacherous political waters, they must confront not only the Empire's desperate final gambit but also an unexpected wild card that could shatter Seldon's thousand-year plan entirely. The mathematical certainty of psychohistory suddenly seems fragile against the unpredictable forces of individual human ambition and the emergence of powers that transcend normal political calculations.

Scott Brick delivers Asimov's complex political maneuvering and scientific concepts with remarkable clarity, his authoritative narration perfectly capturing the scope of galactic civilization in decline. Brick's measured pacing allows listeners to absorb the intricate plot developments while maintaining the tension that drives this middle volume of the trilogy. His distinct character voices help distinguish the expanding cast of politicians, generals, and scientists without ever feeling forced or theatrical. The audio format particularly enhances Asimov's dialogue-heavy storytelling style, transforming philosophical debates about history and human nature into compelling dramatic exchanges that illuminate the grand themes underlying this foundational work of science fiction.