This is the first convention of the space age - where a candidate can promise the moon and mean it.
Change is the principal feature of our age and literature should explore how people deal with it. The best science fiction does that, head-on.
I reluctantly left the series because a) my age. I'm 68 tomorrow and time is very precious for me to spend time at home with my family and especially with the grandchildren. They're aged 7 and 5. After three years I became homesick for my home.
I completed the first three years of primary school in one year and was admitted to the local school the age of six directly into the fourth year, some two years younger than all my contemporaries.
In a more intellectually rigorous age, I wouldn't be talked about as a satirist at all. I would just be a topical comedian.
I have now reached the happy age of 23. No, happy is not quite the right word. At this particular moment I am certainly not happy.
I conclude, therefore, that this star is not some kind of comet or a fiery meteor... but that it is a star shining in the firmament itself one that has never previously been seen before our time, in any age since the beginning of the world.
I will not go into a story unprepared. I will do my homework, and that's something I learned at an early age.
She comes from the Midwest. She had me at a very young age and raised me on her own. She's a very hard worker.
I've dated men my age, younger than me and older. The only difference is the young ones are quicker at taking out the garbage.
But generally I am fine with a capital F; probably in extraordinary shape for a man of my age.
I started acting professionally at age 19.
I can remember running around at the age of 3, wanting to play golf, cricket and football. I was always active, one way or another, driving my parents mad.
I had studied violin from age 7 to 14.
If one age believes too much it is natural that another believes too little.