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Loading... The Martian Chroniclesby Ray Bradbury
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Another brilliant collection from Bradbury, that connects into a larger chronicle of Mars (this is also known as the Martian Chronicles). ( )Arguably the best example of science fantasy. Some stories are better than others, but Bradbury is doing what he does best here: Making you think. With this book I discovered his style is very simular to Asimov. they were probably writing for the same monthly SciFi magazines at the time. These are very short chapters set in a semi-log style starting with January 1999. Of man's attempts to settle Mars, the Martians reaction to colonization and the after affects. The content is very dated (as is Asimov) with white men who drink from flasks and smoke cigarettes stepping off rockets and littering and disrespecting Mars. Still fun to read, this is considered a classic SciFi read. 7-2009 One of the classics of science fiction. This is actually a book of short stories told about the early settlers of Mars. In Bradbury fashion, these have the feeling of folk stories about average people who have strange things happen to them. While the Earthlings settle and explore Mars, the supposedly uninhabited Mars meets and molds them. Great stuff. Although the dates & the science haven't ages well, Bradbury's spare prose still moves the reader. Some of the individual stories are texture for the main narrative, which has ideas that are still relevant today, as they were nearly 60 years ago. no reviews | add a review
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Bradbury's quiet exploration of a future that looks so much like the past is sprinkled with lighter material. In "The Silent Towns," the last man on Mars hears the phone ring and ends up on a comical blind date. But in most of these stories, Bradbury holds up a mirror to humanity that reflects a shameful treatment of "the other," yielding, time after time, a harvest of loneliness and isolation. Yet the collection ends with hope for renewal, as a colonist family turns away from the demise of the Earth towards a new future on Mars. Bradbury is a master fantasist and The Martian Chronicles are an unforgettable work of art. --Blaise Selby
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:54 -0400)
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