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Bradbury, Ray
(redirected from Ray Bradbury)

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Bradbury, Ray (brăd`bĕr'ē, –bərē), 1920–, American writer, b. Waukegan, Ill. A popular and very prolific writer of science fiction science fiction, literary genre in which a background of science or pseudoscience is an integral part of the story. Although science fiction is a form of fantastic literature, many of the events recounted are within the realm of future possibility, e.g.
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, Bradbury skillfully combines social and technological criticism with delightful fantasy. His best-known work is probably The Martian Chronicles (1950), the tale of the ruin of Martian civilization by greedy and corrupt earthlings, which was made into a film (1966) and a TV miniseries (1980). His short-story collections include The Golden Apples of the Sun (1953), The Last Circus and the Executioner (1980), The Toynbee Convector (1988), Quicker than the Eye (1996), and Driving Blind (1997); among his novels are Fahrenheit 451 (1953, film 1966), Dandelion Wine (1957), Something Wicked This Way Comes (1962, film 1983), The Halloween Tree (1972), and A Graveyard for Lunatics (1990). Bradbury has also written scripts for plays and films, a detective novel, children's stories, and poetry.

Bibliography

See biographies by W. L. Johnson (1980), D. Mogen (1986), and S. Weller (2005); studies by G. E. Slusser (1977), W. F. Touponce (1989 and 1998), J. Anderson (1990), and R. A. Reid (2000).


Bradbury, Ray (Douglas)

(born Aug. 22, 1920, Waukegan, Ill., U.S.) U.S. author. Bradbury is best known for highly imaginative science-fiction stories and novels that blend social criticism with an awareness of the hazards of runaway technology. The Martian Chronicles (1950; television miniseries, 1980) is considered a science-fiction classic. His other short-story collections include The Illustrated Man (1951; film, 1969), The October Country (1955), I Sing the Body Electric! (1969; teleplay, 1981), and Quicker Than the Eye (1996). Among his novels are Fahrenheit 451 (1953; film, 1966); Dandelion Wine (1957; film, 1997) and its sequel, Farewell Summer (2006); and Death Is a Lonely Business (1985).


Bradbury, (Raymond Douglas) Ray (1920–  ) writer; born in Waukegan, Ill. This Los Angeles-based writer secured a permanent reputation with such works as The Martian Chronicles (1950) and Fahrenheit 451 (1953). Though best known for more than a dozen volumes of science-fiction stories (The Illustrated Man (1951), A Memory of Murder (1984)), he also wrote novels, drama, essays, and verse. His literary finesse and social criticism did much to make science fiction respectable.


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Since then, it's been used as the title of several novels - one by science fiction writer Ray Bradbury - at least one other movie, as well as TV episodes and songs.
CAPTION(S): MANGLED This is all that was left of the car after two trains smashed into it on railway track; DAMAGE Train was derailed in last night's crash Pictures: RAY BRADBURY
Byline: by Lorne Jackson THE ILLUSTRATED MAN by Ray Bradbury **** BRADBURY is rightfully regarded as one of the greatest living authors of science fiction, having written Fahrenheit 451.
 
 
 
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