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April 26,2025
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As a newly-minted high school reading teacher, my introductory book to spoon-feed to the young'ns was Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451. It was a really good one to start with, as it had a fairly simple and uncomplicated storyline, a small cast of characters, and fairly well-defined themes and literary techniques. Therefore, teaching it to students who weren't native speakers (but whose English was really good nonetheless) was a good experience.

I hadn't read a whole lot of Bradbury prior to that, and really fell in love with the book. F451 was a great read, and something I'll review here once I've let it settle down a bit in my head. After all, I've spent the last couple of months teasing every shred of meaning I could out of it, and that's not the kind of review I write here, now is it? Reading the book gave me a new interest in reading Bradbury, so I picked up a couple of short story collections and started to make my way through them. While I was talking to my department head about it, she recommended that I read The Illustrated Man, a copy of which she just so happened to have sitting around.

The Illustrated Man is a collection of eighteen short stories, more or less unrelated, but brought together under the larger, over-arching story of the Illustrated Man himself. Our narrator, you see, meets a large man on the road. The guy is covered with tattoos, of the highest quality. Their colors are vivid, their details are lifelike, and the man says that, at night, the tattoos come alive. They tell stories, if you watch them long enough. And if you watch them too long, you may see your own future as well....

Well, the narrator decides to watch as the Illustrated Man sleeps, and what he sees are the stories that are presented in this volume.

By and large, the stories are unconnected to each other, which means we can go from a strange future where one family's house takes care of all their material needs to a poor farmer who manages to avoid the end of the world by being in one of his own. Still, there are a few thematic threads that run through the book that are interesting to look at.

One of these themes is the way we relate to technology. Nowhere is this more obvious than in the first tale of the book, "The Veldt." In this story, we meet a family who are completely dependent on their house. It's a technological miracle, where everything is completely automatic. The thought of actually cooking a meal is tantamount to barbarism, and their idea of taking a vacation means just shutting down the more obsequious functions of the house. One of these is the children's nursery. Akin to the holodeck, this room can replicate any environment that the users want. The children's fascination with the savagery of the African savanna worries their parents, though, and the threat of having the room shut down eventually becomes more than the children - or the house - can tolerate.

In "The Concrete Mixer," a Martian invasion force finds themselves overcome by the technology of Earth. Not the military technology, mind you, but the mindless, brain-destroying technology of leisure. Faced with TV and radio, casinos and bars, drive-in movies and fast food, the Martians discover that Earth is far more dangerous than they had ever expected. In "Marionettes, Inc," Bradbury weaves a tale worthy of Philip K. Dick, telling about a very special service that will create an exact android duplicate of yourself. This robot will do all the tedious things in your life, such as go to work, do chores and tolerate your spouse. But what if the perfect robot duplicates are too perfect, and decide that they don't really want to do the drudgery anymore? In "The City," a self-aware metropolis wakes up after twenty thousand years with the arrival of human astronauts - and immediately begins planning its revenge on those who left it so long ago.

Another recurring theme in this collection is that of seeking happiness, through one means or another, and only occasionally finding it. In these stories, characters are looking for something that will make their lives worthwhile, or at the very least a little bit better. In "The Long Rain," a group of explorers on Venus want just one thing - to get out of the eternal, unceasing rain that pummels the planet. The Sun Domes are their only shelter, if they can find one before they die or go mad. In "No Particular Night or Morning," an astronaut searches for the only thing he can be absolutely sure of in this universe - nothingness.

In "The Man," a group of interstellar explorers are looking for a being, who may or may not be Jesus Christ, going from planet to planet and always finding themselves just a little bit too late. In "The Rocket," a poor junkyard owner wants more than anything to fulfill his dream of showing his children outer space, and manages to do it in a slightly roundabout way. And in "Rocket Man," a father tries to find what he really wants - to live among the stars or to stay with his family on Earth, and ultimately realizes that he wants - but cannot have - both.

The stories in here are all pretty good, and there were a few I want to touch on in more detail. The one that I took the most notes on was "The Other Foot," a tale of Mars and the shocking reversal of racial discrimination. In this story, Mars has been colonized by Black exiles from the United States, sent off-planet in an ultimate act of segregation. After decades of eking out an existence on that harsh planet, they learn that a rocket from Earth - probably containing a white astronaut - is on its way. The community reacts in a knee-jerk fashion, preparing a new apartheid on Mars - re-creating the worst of Jim Crow, only in reverse. When the rocket touches down and announces that nuclear war has destroyed everything the colonists had known and loved about Earth, and that white Americans had come to Mars to beg for the help of its citizens, the mob has a change of heart and decides to let bygones be bygones.

As much as I hate post-modernism, I couldn't shut off my critic's voice while reading this story. I wondered if a story about Black oppression written by a white author must automatically be racist in nature, and I wondered if Bradbury's suggestion that Black colonists on Mars would, as a first reaction, try to re-create the worst conditions they had endured on Earth might not be rooted in a fundamental misunderstanding of Black culture. Then the Intellectual Machine That Eats Itself (i.e. Postmodernism) began to ask if perhaps these thoughts were rooted in my own unacknowledged racism, at which point I had to just finish the damn story and move on. It's a question that probably wasn't asked fifty years ago, though, which makes the story an interesting one to revisit in our slightly more enlightened age.

Another story that I really enjoyed was "The Exiles," which has also been titled "The Mad Wizards of Mars." In this tale, the great writes of fiction - and their works - are living (where else?) on Mars. There you can find Edgar Allan Poe and Ambrose Bierce living with Charles Dickens and Shakespeare. They're on Mars because Earth has been systematically destroying their works, and thus depriving them of immortality. When a rocket arrives from Earth carrying the last load of books to be destroyed, the fictionauts launch a last-ditch attempt to save themselves. With Poe leading their armies, they pour all of their power into stopping the rocket. Shakespeare's witches fling curses at the astronauts, and Poe summons all the armies of fiction to defend their existence.

It's a story that you can tell Bradbury had a lot of fun writing, and is full of wonderful references to the authors he loves. Just the image of Edgar Allan Poe screaming defiance at the air is one that I will treasure every time I read the tale.

What's really wonderful about this collection is that it's aged well. Published in 1951, it does suffer from some of the mid-century sci-fi tropes of the day, and modern writers would never be allowed to get away with something like a rainy Venus or humanity calmly accepting the end of the world. But they're still great stories, and well worth the read. So go read 'em.
April 26,2025
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Although I was a science fiction fan as a kid, I did not read any stories by Ray Bradbury ( born August 22, 1920 in Waukegan, IL--died June 5, 2012 in Los Angeles,CA ) until I was in high school and short stories of his were anthologized in literature textbooks. Later, I came to appreciate his wonderful writing style, almost poetic. His emphasis in his speculative fiction was on human nature and not on technology. The collection of his stories in this book reflects his interest in and concern for humanity above all else.
A lot of the stories in this book were ones I had already read, which I expected. My favorite Bradbury is also one of the first short stories of his that I read--"The Long Rain," a story of the struggle for survival by humans on the Planet Venus. This is not the hellishly hot Venus that we know from science (since he wrote the story) but a jungle world of unending rain... Another one that is among my favorites is in this collection--"The Other Foot," in which Mars has been colonized by "Negroes" who fled the segregated South. Now, the whites are coming...And "The Rocket Man." Following "Captain Kirk's" trip into space, I envision The Rocket Man as William Shatner, not the young Shatner who played Kirk, but a somewhat older Shatner (but not as old as the actor who went into space!).
I was delighted to discover a story I hadn't read before and it's a standout--"Zero Hour." The kids are playing a game about spacemen. The adults don't pay much attention--it's just kids' games, right? How did I miss this story? I should have read this book decades ago! Well, better late than never!
April 26,2025
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Brilliant collection of dark , sci-fi short stories. Each story makes you think over and over that what would happen in future.

While ago I watched Black Mirror Tv series and it reminded me again of this terrifying book. Technology and what it brings with itself can be really scary, coming from a software developer it's so lame, I know.
April 26,2025
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A banquet of flavoury and colourful short novels delicately put together.


n  The French Gallimard editionn


The Contents :

Introduction : Dancing, So As Not to Be Dead
Prologue: The Illustrated Man
April 26,2025
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-Pequeños diamantes con solera.-

Género. Relatos.

Lo que nos cuenta. Recopilación de 18 relatos, o quizás sería más exacto llamarlos cuentos, más un epílogo (y en varias ediciones, un prologo del autor escrito muchos años después pero interesante para el trabajo y sobre él mismo) escritos entre 1947 y 1951 para esta publicación, con un relato sobre el que supuestamente se deslizan los otros y que tocan temas tan dispares como formas de afrontar el fin del mundo, una misión espacial que termina en tragedia, el refugio de escritores en otro planeta para evitar su extinción, conflictos raciales desde una perspectiva insospechada, el intento de huir del presente viajando al pasado, un grupo de astronautas que busca un refugio en suelo venusiano, los resultados inesperados de una invasión extraterrestre, el recuerdo de un niño y su madre del padre fallecido, la voluntad de una ciudad inteligente y un cuarto de juegos que simula realidades muy bien, entre otros temas.

¿Quiere saber más de este libro, sin spoilers? Visite:

http://librosdeolethros.blogspot.com/...
April 26,2025
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Clásico de la ciencia ficción de un joven Bradbury con miles de ideas increíbles bullendo en su cabeza. Algunas piezas memorables son:

Marionetas, S. A.: un hombre decide comprar un androide que funciona como su doble, para poder pasar tiempo alejado de su cargante esposa, sin sospechar las trágicas consecuencias que esto le acarreará.

La Pradera: un programa de realidad virtual se irá de las manos cuando los malcriados hijos de un insensible matrimonio lleven las cosas demasiado lejos.

La hora cero: de nuevo un futuro con niños que se comunican con seres extraterrestres y los ayudan a conquistar la Tierra.

La ciudad: unos astronautas llegan confiados a una ciudad en un planeta que parece desierto, sin sospechar la venganza que se está gestando en sus entrañas de metal.

El zorro y el bosque: al haberse inventado los viajes en el tiempo, un matrimonio de refugiados de un futuro lejano, decadente y autoritario, intentan quedarse en el pasado durante el año 1938 en México, para ya no volver, y disfrutando de todo lo que ya no existe de donde ellos vienen, sin imaginar que desde ese futuro han enviado a la policía política en su busca.

En resumen, el Bradbury clásico, mucha melancolía y crítica social, con algunas piezas como las antes mencionadas, realmente brillantes.
April 26,2025
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Bradbury is unmatched. This collection serves as a constant inspiration and reminder to be better, in the hopes that one day I can inspire the awe and thrill that Bradbury's imagination and talent instilled in me.
My uncle gifted me this book. When he was younger he collected every story Bradbury wrote through science fiction magazines in the mail. I am SO grateful to him for introducing me to more of Bradbury's stories.
April 26,2025
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Ray Bradbury's The Illustrated Man is probably that author's best short story collection - at the very least, it's the one I've read the most. Using the framing device of a carnival worker plagued by magical tattoos, the book unspools 18 stories of sci-fi and speculative fiction. Bradbury's simple but poetic prose style, invoking imaginary worlds, dazzling futures and dread fantasies, is on full display throughout this book. In some stories, like "The Veldt" (a kid's electronic playroom becomes all too real) and "Zero Hour" (an eight year old girl becomes the head of an alien invasion), Bradbury reaches for a unique combination of fantastic horror, with the imaginations of children (aided by technology or aliens) overthrowing the gentle tyranny of rational adulthood. Revenge also animates "The Exiles," where the spirits of authors banned in a dystopian Earth prepare to fight astronauts on Mars, and "The City," where explorers are confronted by a planet seeking vengeance for a long-ago atrocity. Other stories are gently humanist, like "The Other Foot," where a Martian colony of Black refugees shakes with trepidation at the encroachment of white men, or "The Rocket Man," where a boy reflects on his relationship with his often-distant, space traveling father. My favorite of this collection might be "The Long Rain," with its iconic imagery of astronauts stranded on a rain-swept Venus, trying to find help before they lose their minds. There are a handful of duds in this collection ("The Rocket" veers too much towards cheap sentimentality, while "The Highway" and "The Last Night of the World" are too insubstantial to register) but most capture Bradbury's striking ability to conjure faraway worlds as ably as everyday life. Adapted, not very successfully, into a film starring Rod Steiger and Claire Bloom; many of the stories were also dramatized on The Ray Bradbury Theatre television series.
April 26,2025
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--Prologue: The Illustrated Man
--The Veld
--Kaleidoscope
--The Other Foot
--The Highway
--The Man
--The Long Rain
--Usher II
--The Last Night of the World
--The Rocket
--No Particular Night or Morning
--The Fox and the Forest
--The Visitor
--Marionettes, Inc.
--The City
--Zero Hour
--The Playground
--Epilogue
April 26,2025
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It was a dark and stormy night. Enters a mysterious character that seems escaped from a different novel (Something Wicked This Way Comes) . His body is completely covered in animated tattoos, images that he claims show events yet to pass. If you look carefully, you might even get a glimpse of your own future.
The role of this opening sequence of the collection serves as a foreword from the author explaining why these previously published stories were included here and not others: they are a map of our humanity, a DNA sequencing of our emotional landscape, a study of the intimate, deeply personal impact of the future on our lives. Bradbury is focused on the individual, on what goes on inside the head of his characters, on motivations and aspirations and phobias. Science is incidental to the plot, it's there as part of the environment, and the questions of why or how it works are less important that the ones about how it affects the psychology of the individuals caught in its grip.

While the quality of the stories is a uneven, and some of them feel dated , the ones that are good are really exceptional in their beautiful, evocative language and powerful emotional impact. I find it difficult to pick a favorite, but I think I will go with:

The Rocket Man - the story of the family man who loves deeply his wife and kid, but can't resist the call of the star spangled skies at night.

Coming close behind:
Kaleidoscope - a group of astronauts are ejected into space when their ship is damaged and talk to each other over radio.

The Exiles - echoing some themes from Fahrenheit 451, gothic and fantastic literature is banned on Earth, the books burned and the stories almost forgotten.

No Particular Night or Morning - about the emptiness of space and the claustrophobic pressure of living for months inside a cramped rocket.

The Fox and the Forest - a couple travels back in time in order to escape from a future militarized gulag.

Zero Hour - a children's game about an alien invasion may turned out to be true after all. Made me think of Hitchcock.

The Rocket - space travel is expensive and a man saves money for decades, hoping one day he or one member of his family may buy a ticket to see the planets and the stars from up close.

If I continue, I will eventually list all the stories. Of particular interest are several that explore the role of religion in the future. Bardbury doesn't hold the view that science excludes the need for spiritual epiphany, and I must say I kind of agree with him. It's important at least for the questions to be asked and to search for the answers: The Man , The Fire Balloons and tangentially The Visitor and The Other Foot are the stories dealing with spirituality and morality.

I said some of the stories feel dated. I wasn't referring to the language or the themes, but rather to the way space and the planets are presented. Mars and Venus are in fact mirror images of Earth, ignoring the differences in gravity, air pressure, toxic elements or radiation. Mars is a dry desert and on Venus it rains all the time, and that's about it. Space travel is also more of a concept than a credible rendition. Not even the weightlessness is mentioned. The time to travel to Mercury or Pluto is less that three months, aliens have no problem breathing our air or conversing with Earthlings. And so on ...

For all these minor complaints, I would still put The Illustrated Man on my top ten short story collection listopia.
April 26,2025
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Interesting that Bradbury's aim with his writing was to make others "jealous of his joy", yet all of his stories are so dark! You can still hear him enjoying the telling of them :)

Reminds me to get over my fears of running out of ideas or writing first to please others—therein, as friends have told me too, is the path to madness!
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