Ray Bradbury
Ray Bradbury (born August 22, 1920) is a science fiction and fantasy writer.
He was born in Waukegan, Illinois, and his family moved several times, eventually settling in Los Angeles in 1934. Bradbury was a reader and writer throughout his youth. He graduated high school in Los Angeles but could not afford college. To make a living, he sold newspapers. He self-educated himself at the library and began to seriously write stories on the typewriter. He began to sell his first stories to pulp magazines in the early 1940's. His first book, the collection Dark Carnival, was published in 1947.
Notable works include:
He has also worked on screenplays, including Moby Dick (1956) and King of Kings (1961), both directed by John Huston. Bradbury wrote the voice-over narration for King of Kings, notably Christ's final monologue, but did not receive screen credit.
He has also written stories for The Twilight Zone(though uncredited).
His short story "The Foghorn", in which a sea monster mistakes a foghorn for the mating cry of a female, was adapted into the film The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms in 1953. Several of his stories were adapted by EC Comics in the 1950s, and later, a number of his novels were made into films. The Martian Chronicles was made into a miniseries starring Rock Hudson in 1979. Also, adaptations of his short stories were used as the basis for a television series, the Ray Bradbury Theater, in the mid 1980's.
There is an asteroid named in his honor called (9766) Bradbury.
Referenced By
1920 | 1920 in literature | 1953 in literature | 1955 in literature | 22 August | 22nd August | Arnold J. Toynbee | August 22 | August 22nd | Barsoom | Book burning | Bram Stoker Award for Best Fiction Collection | Bram Stoker Award for Best Novel | Bram Stoker Award for Best Short Fiction | Bram Stoker Award for Best Short Story | Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement | Concept album | Dystopia | Edward Hamilton Waldo | Fahrenheit 451 | Famous Unitarian Universalists | Fictional cities | Fictional city | Film writer | Foundation's Friends | Four hundred and fifty-one | Francois Truffaut | François Truffaut | Gandalf Award | Guy Montag | Historical anniversaries/August 22 | I Sing The Body Electric | I Sing The Body Electric! | Julie Schwartz | Julius Schwartz | Karel Capek | Leigh Brackett | List of Unitarian Universalists | List of aliens in fiction | List of authors by name: B | List of books by title: F | List of books by title: O | List of fictional aliens | List of fictional cities | List of fictional robots | List of novelists | List of novelists by country: United States | List of novelists by nationality | List of novelists from the United States | List of people by name: BR | List of science fiction authors | List of science fiction novels | List of screenwriters | List of short story authors | Lock Up | Mars/Mars in fiction | Mars in fiction | McCarthy era | McCarthyism | Moby-Dick | MobyDick | Moby Dick | New Wave (science fiction) | Norman Corwin | Prometheus Award | Proposed future transport | Pulp magazine | Pulp magazines | Pulps | Ray Bradbury/The Martian Chronicles | Robots in fiction | Robots in film | Robots in literature | Robots in television | Rocket Man (song) | Rupert Hart-Davis | ScienceFiction | Science Fiction | Science Fiction Fandom | Science fiction/Soft science fiction | Science fiction/authors | Science fiction/new wave | Science fiction author | Science fiction authors | Science fiction novel | Science fiction writers | Screenwriter | Scriptwriter | Short story author | Short story authors | Soft science fiction | Something Wicked This Way Comes | Space Patrol (old-time radio show) | Stan Freberg | The Butterfly Effect | The Illustrated Man | The Martian Chronicles | The Twilight Zone | The Twilight Zone/ | Theodore Sturgeon ...
|