Becoming Ray Bradbury chronicles the making of an iconic American writer by exploring Ray Bradbury's childhood and early years of his long life in fiction, film, television, radio, and theater. Jonathan R. Eller measures the impact of the authors, artists, illustrators, and filmmakers who stimulated Bradbury's imagination throughout his first three decades. Unprecedented access to Bradbury's personal papers and other private collections provides insight into his emerging talent through his unpublished correspondence, his rare but often insightful notes on writing, and his interactions with those who mentored him during those early years. Beginning with his childhood in Waukegan, Illinois, and Los Angeles, this biography follows Bradbury's development from avid reader to maturing author, making a living writing for pulp magazines. Eller illuminates the sources of Bradbury's growing interest in the human mind, the human condition, and the ambiguities of life and death--themes that became increasingly apparent in his early fiction. Bradbury's correspondence documents his frustrating encounters with the major trade publishing houses and his earliest unpublished reflections on the nature of authorship. Eller traces the sources of Bradbury's very conscious decisions, following the sudden success of The Martian Chronicles and The Illustrated Man, to voice controversial political statements in his fiction, and he highlights the private motivations behind the burst of creative energy that transformed his novella "The Fireman" into the classic novel Fahrenheit 451. Becoming Ray Bradbury reveals Bradbury's emotional world as it matured through his explorations of cinema and art, his interactions with agents and editors, his reading discoveries, and the invaluable reading suggestions of older writers. These largely unexplored elements of his life pave the way to a deeper understanding of his more public achievements, providing a biography of the mind, the story of Bradbury's self-education and the emerging sense of authorship at the heart of his boundless creativity.
But on Sunday evening he began to receive calls from East Coast viewers who had already seen it and from his friend Bob Kirsch, a Los Angeles book review columnist who told him to turn on Playhouse 90 to see the end ofthe West Coast ...
But in Bradbury's mind, the best review took the form of a postcard from Robert Bloch, who knew a thing or two about psychosis. Bradbury and Bloch had been friends since the 1946 WorldCon in San Francisco, and they had often ...
1969 Books 69 - A Bloch and Bradbury Dual - author story collection . Ed . Kurt Singer . New York and Canada : Tower , 1969 ( paperback ) ; London : Sphere , 1970 ( paperback ) , retitled Fever Dream and Other Fantasies ; ( Chicago ...
With unprecedented access to private archives, he uncovered never–before–published letters, documents, and photographs that help tell the story of this literary genius and his remarkable creative journey.
For use in schools and libraries only. A totalitarian regime has ordered all books to be destroyed, but one of the book burners suddenly realizes their merit.
A totalitarian regime has ordered all books to be destroyed, but one of the book burners suddenly realizes their merit.
A totalitarian regime has ordered all books to be destroyed, but one of the book burners, Guy Montag, suddenly realizes their merit.
Bradbury's Mars is a place of hope, dreams and metaphor - of crystal pillars and fossil seas - where a fine dust settles on the great, empty cities of a silently destroyed civilization.
In the preamble to The Exploration of Space (1951), Clarke discusses the symbiosis between Science Fiction narratives and scientific research, asserting that “the conquest of space must obviously have a fundamental appeal to human ...
With unprecedented access to private archives, he uncovered never–before–published letters, documents, and photographs that help tell the story of this literary genius and his remarkable creative journey.