Because he couldn't afford to buy the real thing, Ray Bradbury's first work was a sequel to the Edgar Rice Burroughs' book “Gods of Mars.” The year was 1932. Born in Illinois, Bradbury lived in Tucson ...
Kelcie Mattson is a Senior Features author at Collider. Based in the Midwest, she also contributes Lists, reviews, and television recaps. A lifelong fan of niche sci-fi, epic fantasy, Final Girl ...
A city writer learns a lesson when he takes an idealistic view of rural life, but discovers the truth is far different when he impulsively leaves a train to explore a small town. A girl can't convince ...
Frustrated by fake citations and flowery prose packed with “out-of-left-field” references to ancient libraries and Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, a New York federal judge took the rare step of ...
A cinematic obsessive with the filmic palate of a starving raccoon, Rob London will watch pretty much anything once. With a mind like a steel trap, he's an endless fount of movie and TV trivia, borne ...
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Ray Bradbury
Awarded a Pulitzer Prize Special Citation, recognizing a lifetime of influential literary works, Ray Bradbury wrote from a desire to “live forever”. Through sci fi, fantasy, horror and mystery to ...
Above, from left: National Black Theatre CEO Sade Lythcott, former Ford Foundation president Darren Walker, and Ray founder Dasha Zhukova Niarchos. Sade Lythcott and Dasha Zhukova Niarchos’s first ...
A faithful reconstruction of Ray Bradbury’s home office highlights the Ray Bradbury Center on the campus of Indiana University Indianapolis. Photo provided by Ray Bradbury Center The Ray Bradbury ...
Art from a variety of media — including painting, music, sculpture and literature — was on display for the public to enjoy and add their own creativity in celebration of Ray Bradbury, a Waukegan ...
Tales of body-snatching aliens and apocalyptic super-flus by Ray Bradbury, Stephen King and more double as time capsules of American fear. By Michael Koryta As spooky season approaches, the master of ...
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