Famous Birthdays: Ray Bradbury
Angel Rivera
Born on a day like today in 1920, Ray Douglas Bradbury is one of the greatest and most celebrated writers from the United States. He was a prolific writer in various genres including science fiction, fantasy, horror, and mystery. According to the St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, "by the early years of the twenty-first century, Bradbury had published more than 500 works, but age did not impede his writing or threaten his impact on American popular culture" (see below for citation).
Bradbury died in 2012 at the age of 91. In his lifetime he received many honors such as recognition from the National Book Foundation for "Distinguished Contributions to American Letters" to a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Other awards include the title of Grandmaster from the Science Fiction Writers of America and the National Medal of Arts.
Here is a selection of Bradbury's works available at our library that you can check out with a college ID:
Ray Bradbury: Novels and Story Cycles (LOA #347) by Ray Bradbury; Jonathan R. Eller (Editor)
Call Number: Fiction B798no 2021
ISBN: 9781598537000
Publication Date: 2021-09-07
Four classics of the imagination from one of America's most beloved authors--including the complete Martian Chronicles. A master storyteller and visionary champion of creative freedom, Ray Bradbury is one of the most beloved and influential writers of our time. To explore the worlds of his books, his astonishing futures and haunting pasts, is to rediscover the wondrous possibilities of life. This Library of America edition gathers four of his greatest works in a single volume. Here is The Martian Chronicles in the complete form Bradbury came to prefer, its twenty-eight linked story-chapters offering visionary glimpses of our spacefaring future. In the dystopian thriller Fahrenheit 451, books and all they contain are forbidden. Dandelion Wine distills the enchanting essences of a childhood summer, while Something Wicked This Way Comes conjures the wild, centrifugal imaginings of youthful terror, in a fight to the death against supernatural foes. Biographer Jonathan R. Eller offers a newly researched chronology of Bradbury's life and career and detailed textual and explanatory notes.
Ray Bradbury: the Illustrated Man, the October Country and Other Stories (LOA #360) by Ray Bradbury; Jonathan R. Eller (Editor)
Call Number: Fiction B798iL 2022
ISBN: 9781598537284
Publication Date: 2022-10-04
In one authoritative volume, here are two landmark story collections by one of America's most beloved authors, plus 27 stellar, speculative, and strange tales from other collections, including 7 restored to print The author of over 400 short stories, Ray Bradbury was a master not only in the science fiction genre, for which he is best known, but also in speculative, horror, and dark fantasy. Here are two of Bradbury's most beloved collections, along with twenty-seven other stories, that together represent the best of Bradbury's stories of the 1940s, 50s, and 60s. The Illustrated Man--the more Earthbound science fiction companion to Bradbury's classic collection The Martian Chronicles--contains eighteen short stories bound together by the unifying metaphor of a strangely tattooed outcast. The stories explore both the dehumanizing possibilities of space-age technology--in "The Veldt" and "The Rocket Man"--and the pessimistic, dark side of humanity, as in "The Visitor." The October Country collects nineteen short stories: macabre carnival tales, speculative horror, and strange fantasy. "Uncle Einar" and "Homecoming" concern the monstrous and immortal Elliott family. In "The Next in Line," a woman becomes convinced that she'll never leave the small, Mexican town she's traveled to on vacation. And in "Touched with Fire," two old men have learned to predict future murders. This edition restores the original artwork by Joe Mugnaini. Rounding out the volume are twenty-seven other short stories from the first half of Bradbury's career selected by Bradbury scholar Joanthan R, Eller, including "Frost and Fire," in which humans on another planet live only eight days; "The Pedestrian," about the only man in the world who does not watch television, and "I Sing the Body Electric!," in which a family purchases a robotic grandmother. Also includes such hard to find stories as "R is for Rocket," "Asleep in Armageddon," and "The Lost City of Mars."
Quote source:
Lovett-Graff, Bennett. "Bradbury, Ray (1920–2012)." St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, edited by Thomas Riggs, 2nd ed., vol. 1, St. James Press, 2013, pp. 401-402. Gale eBooks, link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX2735800348/GVRL?u=berea&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=1f08b1df. Accessed 22 Aug. 2023.
You can access this article and many others on a variety of topics through Gale Virtual Reference, our online collection of reference works. You can find Gale Virtual Reference on the library website under "Electronic Resources." Note that if you are trying to access our library's resources from outside the Berea College domain, you will be prompted to log in with your BC credentials.
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