Sci-Fi Author Ray Bradbury Passes Away

NDFan4Life

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Ray Bradbury, the writer whose expansive flights of fantasy and vividly rendered space-scapes have provided the world with one of the most enduring speculative blueprints for the future, has died. He was 91.

Bradbury died Tuesday night in Los Angeles, his agent Michael Congdon confirmed. His family said in a statement that he had suffered from a long illness.

Author of more than 27 novels and story collections—most famously "The Martian Chronicles," "Fahrenheit 451," "Dandelion Wine" and "Something Wicked This Way Comes"—and more than 600 short stories, Bradbury has frequently been credited with elevating the often-maligned reputation of science fiction. Some say he singlehandedly helped to move the genre into the realm of literature.

"The only figure comparable to mention would be [Robert A.] Heinlein and then later [Arthur C.] Clarke," said Gregory Benford, a UC Irvine physics professor who is also a Nebula award-winning science fiction writer. "But Bradbury, in the '40s and '50s, became the name brand."

Much of Bradbury's accessibility and ultimate popularity had to do with his gift as a stylist—his ability to write lyrically and evocatively of lands an imagination away, worlds he anchored in the here and now with a sense of visual clarity and small-town familiarity.

The late Sam Moskowitz, the preeminent historian of science fiction, once offered this assessment: "In style, few match him. And the uniqueness of a story of Mars or Venus told in the contrasting literary rhythms of Hemingway and Thomas Wolfe is enough to fascinate any critic."

Ray Bradbury, enduring author of fantasy, science fiction, dies at 91 - latimes.com

One of my favorite sci-fi authors. R.I.P. Mr. Bradbury.
 

Old Man Mike

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Fahrenheit 451 is one of the most powerful dystopian statements of any age, making Ray Bradbury the equivalent of a "Prophet", not in the erroneous meaning of a fortune teller, but the original meaning of a Voice crying in the Wilderness, that we must change our heading. The Martian Chronicles have much of the Moral and Spiritual in them too, along with stark human folly --- something no other genre than science fiction can so overtly provide. And a college prof friend of mine thought Dandelion Wine such a good "proper living" book that he used it as required reading in his classes.

That said: nothing matches, for me, the utter unusualness of story and message of Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land. THAT was the science fiction book for the 60s, and places Heinlein past Bradbury for me. The two of them are so far beyond Arthur C Clarke that I can't see him even if I stand on top of the Monolith.
 

irishfanjho15

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Fahrenheit 451 is one of the most powerful dystopian statements of any age, making Ray Bradbury the equivalent of a "Prophet", not in the erroneous meaning of a fortune teller, but the original meaning of a Voice crying in the Wilderness, that we must change our heading.

Second only to Orwell's 1984 as my favorite of the dystopian novels.

RIP Cosmic Ray.
 

TerryTate

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Something Wicked This Way Comes was a good book. Read it in middle school.
 
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