Ray Bradbury (1920–2012)
Author of Fahrenheit 451
About the Author
Ray Bradbury was born in Waukegan, Illinois on August 22, 1920. At the age of fifteen, he started submitting short stories to national magazines. During his lifetime, he wrote more than 600 stories, poems, essays, plays, films, television plays, radio, music, and comic books. His books include The show more Martian Chronicles, Fahrenheit 451, The Illustrated Man, Dandelion Wine, Something Wicked This Way Comes, and Bradbury Speaks. He won numerous awards for his works including a World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement in 1977, the 2000 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, the 2004 National Medal of Arts, and the 2007 Pulitzer Prize Special Citation. He wrote the screen play for John Huston's classic film adaptation of Moby Dick, and was nominated for an Academy Award. He adapted 65 of his stories for television's The Ray Bradbury Theater, and won an Emmy for his teleplay of The Halloween Tree. The film The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit was written by Ray Bradbury and was based on his story The Magic White Suit. He was the idea consultant and wrote the basic scenario for the United States pavilion at the 1964 World's Fair, as well as being an imagineer for Walt Disney Enterprises, where he designed the Spaceship Earth exhibition at Walt Disney World's Epcot Center. He died after a long illness on June 5, 2012 at the age of 91. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Ray Bradbury
Bradbury Classic Stories 1: From the Golden Apples of the Sun and R Is for Rocket (Grand Master Editions) (1990) 635 copies, 5 reviews
The Martian Chronicles / The Illustrated Man / The Golden Apples of the Sun (2011) 343 copies, 1 review
Twice 22: Ray Bradbury's Two Memorable Books: The Golden Apples of the Sun and A Medicine for Melancholy (1966) 311 copies, 1 review
Ray Bradbury: Novels & Story Cycles (LOA #347): The Martian Chronicles / Fahrenheit 451 / Dandelion Wine / Something Wicked This Way Comes (Library of America) (2021) 219 copies, 3 reviews
Ray Bradbury: The Illustrated Man, The October Country & Other Stories (LOA #360) (The Library of America, 360) (2022) 122 copies
Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes: The Authorized Adaptation (2011) — Original Story — 106 copies, 4 reviews
Fahrenheit 451,Brave New World and 1984 Nineteen Eighty-Four 3 Books Bundle Collection (2016) 55 copies
Ray Bradbury: The Last Interview: And other Conversations (The Last Interview Series) (2014) 49 copies, 1 review
Fahrenheit 451 - The Illustrated Man - Dandelion Wine - The Golden Apples of the Sun & the Martian Chronicles (1987) 48 copies
The Collected Stories of Ray Bradbury: A Critical Edition, Volume 1: 1938-1943 (2010) — Author — 35 copies, 2 reviews
Dragon 25 copies
The Collected Stories of Ray Bradbury: A Critical Edition, Volume 2: 1943-1944 (2014) — Author — 23 copies
Something Wicked This Way Comes [Colonial Radio Theatre Adapted Dramatization] (2007) 18 copies, 4 reviews
The Collected Stories of Ray Bradbury: A Critical Edition, Volume 3, 1944-1945 (2017) — Author — 17 copies
There Will Come Soft Rains 14 copies
O Abismo de Chicago 13 copies
The Pendulum 12 copies
Ray Bradbury Gift Set: WITH "The Halloween Tree" AND "Something Wicked This Way Comes" AND "October Country" (2008) 10 copies
The Rocket 9 copies
Unterseeboot Doktor [short fiction] 9 copies
CLASICOS DE CIENCIA FICCION (Clasicos Juveniles / Juvenile Classics) (Spanish Edition) (2003) 8 copies
Dorian in Excelsis 8 copies
13 For Corwin: A Paean of Praise for Norman Corwin, the #1 Writer-Producer-Director During Radio's Golden Age (1993) 7 copies
Jack in the Box 7 copies
The Strawberry Window [short story] 7 copies
Last Rites 6 copies
The 16th Science Fiction MEGAPACK®: 77 Modern and Classic Science Fiction Stories (2021) 6 copies, 1 review
And the Rock Cried Out [short story] 6 copies
The Cistern 6 copies
The Black Ferris 5 copies
Galaxy 11 - Eine Auswahl der besten Stories aus dem Schience Fiction Magazine GALAXY (1968) — Contributor — 5 copies
The Finnegan 5 copies
The Sound of Summer Running 5 copies
Another Fine Mess 5 copies
The Next In Line 5 copies
The Man Upstairs 5 copies
The Drummer Boy of Shiloh 5 copies
The Martian Chronicles / Fahrenheit 451 / Dandelion Wine / Something Wicked This Way Comes FOUR BOOK SET IN RUSSIAN (2001) 5 copies
A última cidade de Marte 4 copies
That Woman on the Lawn 4 copies
The Witch Door 4 copies
The Smiling People 4 copies
Banshee 4 copies
The Illustrated Man [short story] 4 copies
Bradbury, Ray 4 copies
The Handler 4 copies
Flamingo Modern Classics Book Bundle: The Martrian Chronicles, Fahrenheit 451, The Illustrated Man (2012) 3 copies
Fahrenheit 451; And the Rock Cried Out; The Play Ground (With a New Introduction By the Author) (1967) 3 copies
Bless Me Father for I Have Sinned 3 copies
The Life Work of Juan Diaz 3 copies
Aici sînt tigri 3 copies
Remember Sascha? 3 copies
Death and the Maiden 3 copies
No News, or What Killed the Dog? 3 copies
And the Sailor Home from the Sea 3 copies
The Whole Town's Sleeping 3 copies
Tyrannosaurus Rex 3 copies
On the Orient, North 3 copies
Hopscotch 3 copies
Season of Disbelief 3 copies
The Anthem Sprinters [short story] 3 copies
A Wild Night in Galway 3 copies
Junior 3 copies
Lafayette Farewell 3 copies
Trapdoor 3 copies
The Begger on O'Connell Bridge 3 copies
Amžinos atostogos 3 copies
Once More, Legato 3 copies
By the Numbers! 3 copies
Bright Phoenix 3 copies
The Poems 3 copies
Let's Play Poison 3 copies
Bug 3 copies
The Time Machine [short fiction] 3 copies
The Vacation 3 copies
The Troll 3 copies
Papa ile Papağan 2 copies
Short Science Fiction Collection 076 2 copies
Short Science Fiction Collection 057 2 copies
1 2 copies
Romans et nouvelles 2 copies
Ray Bradbury Theater, Vol. 2 2 copies
2 2 copies
רשימות מן המאדים 2 copies
Stories Volume 2 2 copies
Τα χρονικά του Άρη 2 copies
Slunce a stín 2 copies
Las doradas manzanas al sol 2 copies
Nešto nam se zlo privlači 2 copies
Ο εικονογραφημένος άνθρωπος 2 copies
Uncollected Stories 2 copies
El lago y otros cuentos 2 copies
Phoenix 451 2 copies
!! SCHEDA DOPPIA !! 2 copies
Bang! You're Dead! 2 copies
Wake for the Living 2 copies
Driving Blind [novelette] 2 copies
The Machineries of Joy [short story] 2 copies
A Far-Away Guitar 2 copies
The Sea Shell 2 copies
The Swan 2 copies
The Beautiful Shave 2 copies
This attic where the meadow greens 2 copies
Världens bästa spökhistorier. 2, [En ny samling otroligt spännande spökhistorier, skrivna av verkligt välkända författare!] (1990) 2 copies
Some Live Like Lazarus 2 copies
All on a Summer's Night 2 copies
America (poem) 2 copies
Ray Bradbury Himself Reads 19 Complete Stories: The Grand Master of Inner Space and Outer Space (1993) 2 copies
Perhaps We are Going Away 2 copies
The Thing At The Top Of The Stairs 2 copies
A Blade of Grass [short story] 2 copies
Världens bästa spökhistorier. 2, [En ny samling otroligt spännande spökhistorier, skrivna av verkligt välkända författare!] (1990) 2 copies
The Best of All Possible Worlds 2 copies
The Night 1 copy
Free Dirt 1 copy
Fahrenheit - Teacher copy 1 copy
The Other Highway 1 copy
O pas̕ de outubro 1 copy
2000x: Pillar of Fire 1 copy
"Moby Dick" Release Script 1 copy
A sangue freddo 1 copy
Haunted House 1 copy
Yesterday, I Lived 1 copy
At The End Of The Ninth Year 1 copy
O Mundo Marciano 1 copy
A árvore sagrada 1 copy
THE GROON - a Halloween Poem 1 copy
Weird Science No. 10 1 copy
I, Mars 1 copy
As maças douradas do sol 1 copy
火星年代記 1 copy
火の柱 (1980年) 1 copy
Vin de papadie 1 copy
R Is for Rocket 1 copy
Uma Estranha Família 1 copy
Память человечества 1 copy
There Will Come Soft Rains 1 copy
Ukkosen jyrähdys 1 copy
The novels of Ray Bradbury 1 copy
Hacia el futuro 1 copy
Short Stories 1 copy
О вечных скитаниях и о Земле 1 copy
The Offering 1 copy
Science and Sorcery 1 copy
何かが道をやってくる 〔新訳版〕 1 copy
火星年代記 メモリアル・エディション [DVD] 1 copy
Вино из одуванчиков 1 copy
Doodad 1 copy
Quid Pro Quo 1 copy
The Ghost In The Machine 1 copy
The Very Gentle Murders 1 copy
Երկրացիները։ Պատմվածքներ 1 copy
Ray Bradbury - Robert Bloch 1 copy
A sombra do campanário 1 copy
A árvore sagrada 1 copy
И грянул гром 1 copy
Momento Mori 1 copy
The Irritated People 1 copy
West Of October 1 copy
There Will Come Soft Rains [radio dramatisation] — Original author — 1 copy
That Stranger on the Lawn 1 copy
Promotion To Satellite 1 copy
Gotcha! 1 copy
The Electrocution 1 copy
Zaharoff/richter Mark V 1 copy
Нощен влак за Вавилон 1 copy
Un Remède à la mélancolie 1 copy
La fine del principio 1 copy
Last Laughs (Short story) 1 copy
The Murder (Short story) 1 copy
Doubles (Short story) 1 copy
Pater Caninus (Short story) 1 copy
La feria de las tinieblas 1 copy
"Illustrated Man," The Veldt," "Marionettes, Inc.", (Ray Bradbury, Leonard Nemoy) Caedmon: TC 1479 1 copy
Tales of the Bizarre 1 copy
The Thing at the Top of the Stairs/Eidolons — Contributor — 1 copy
The Visit (Short story) 1 copy
Cuentos de ficción 1 copy
Doing is Being 1 copy
Pulp Fiction: The Golden Age of Sci Fi, Fantasy & Adventure, aka The Golden Age of Storytelling (2010) 1 copy
Pietà Summer (Short story) 1 copy
Fly Away Home (Short story) 1 copy
La savana. Un atto di 1 copy
Kükreyen Fare 1 copy
Ateş ve Buz 1 copy
The Bike Repairmen 1 copy
Ertelenen Aşk 1 copy
Ashton Smith 1 copy
Pradžios pabaiga: apsakymai 1 copy
Un-pillow Talk (Short story) 1 copy
ΠΑPE ME KONTA ΣΟΥ 1 copy
All Hallows E 1 copy
I'll Not Look for Wine 1 copy
The Climate Of Palettes 1 copy
The Small-Town Plaza 1 copy
Samurai / Kabuki 1 copy
Maly Morderca 1 copy
To and From Dust 1 copy
The Lazarus Plague 1 copy
Futuria Fantasia (Vol.1-4): Complete Illustrated Four Volume Edition - Science Fiction Fanzine Created by Ray Bradbury (2020) 1 copy
Death-by-rain 1 copy
Argosy July 1954 1 copy
HA Imedicine for melancholy 1 copy
Le Cronache (2.2) — Author — 1 copy
Le Cronache (1.2) — Author — 1 copy
No Strings Attached 1 copy
Ray Bradbury’s The Autumn People adapted and illustrated in the good old comic book tradition 1 copy
Twice Thirteen 1 copy
Recordações do Futuro 1 copy
If Only We Had Taller Been 1 copy
Ray Bradbury 1 copy
Long After Ecclesiastes 1 copy
the wonderful ice cream suit 1 copy
Cemitério de Lunáticos 2 1 copy
Cemitério de Lunáticos 1 1 copy
Muito Depois da Meia-Noite 2 1 copy
Associated Works
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1869) — Introduction, some editions — 21,249 copies, 283 reviews
The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (1966) — mistaken ascription, some editions — 11,477 copies, 211 reviews
Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions (1884) — Introduction, some editions — 10,955 copies, 202 reviews
The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One: The Greatest Science Fiction Stories of All Time (1970) — Contributor — 2,096 copies, 34 reviews
In the Stacks: Short Stories about Libraries and Librarians (2002) — Contributor — 547 copies, 13 reviews
The Big Book of Science Fiction: The Ultimate Collection (2016) — Contributor — 520 copies, 7 reviews
Great Detectives: A Century of the Best Mysteries from England and America (1984) — Contributor — 403 copies, 5 reviews
The American Short Story: A Collection of the Best Known and Most Memorable Stories by the Great American Authors (1994) — Contributor — 370 copies
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Eighth Annual Collection (1995) — Contributor — 330 copies, 6 reviews
The Penguin Book of Christmas Stories: From Hans Christian Andersen to Angela Carter (2019) — Author — 328 copies, 5 reviews
75 Short Masterpieces: Stories from the World's Literature (1961) — Contributor — 316 copies, 2 reviews
American Fantastic Tales : Terror and the Uncanny from the 1940's to Now (2009) — Contributor — 299 copies, 5 reviews
Bruce Coville's Book of Aliens: Tales to Warp Your Mind (1994) — Contributor — 218 copies, 4 reviews
The Vampire Archives: The Most Complete Volume of Vampire Tales Ever Published (2007) — Contributor — 213 copies, 5 reviews
Masterpieces of Terror and the Unknown: A Treasury of Bizarre Tales Old and New (1993) — Contributor — 212 copies, 2 reviews
In Another Part of the Forest: An Anthology of Gay Short Fiction (1994) — Contributor — 191 copies, 2 reviews
Alfred Hitchcock Presents: 12 Stories for Late at Night (1962) — Contributor — 191 copies, 2 reviews
The collected works of Buck Rogers in the 25th century (1969) — Introduction — 176 copies, 2 reviews
Vampires, Wine and Roses: Chilling Tales of Immortal Pleasure (1997) — Contributor — 169 copies, 2 reviews
Infinite Worlds : The Fantastic Visions of Science Fiction Art (1997) — Introduction, some editions — 166 copies
Isaac Asimov's Magical Worlds of Fantasy, Volume 4: Spells (1942) — Contributor — 153 copies, 1 review
The Very Best of Fantasy & Science Fiction: Sixtieth Anniversary Anthology (2009) — Contributor — 148 copies, 6 reviews
The Best From Fantasy and Science Fiction: The Fiftieth Anniversary Anthology (1999) — Contributor — 127 copies, 3 reviews
McSweeney's 45: Hitchcock and Bradbury Fistfight in Heaven (2013) — Introduction/Contributor — 119 copies, 6 reviews
Edgar Rice Burroughs: The man who created Tarzan (1975) — Introduction, some editions — 114 copies, 4 reviews
Science Fiction Showcase: Eleven Extraordinary Stories by Eleven Masters of Science-Fiction and Fantasy (1959) — Contributor — 110 copies, 3 reviews
War No More: Three Centuries of American Antiwar and Peace Writing (2016) — Contributor — 108 copies, 2 reviews
Isaac Asimov Presents : The Golden Years of Science Fiction, 5th Series (1985) — Contributor — 103 copies
Isaac Asimov Presents : The Golden Years of Science Fiction, 4th Series (1984) — Contributor — 101 copies, 1 review
The Prentice Hall Anthology of Science Fiction and Fantasy (2000) — Contributor — 99 copies, 2 reviews
Ackermanthology: 65 Astonishing, Rediscovered Sci-Fi Shorts (1997) — Contributor — 97 copies, 1 review
Psychos: Serial Killers, Depraved Madmen, and the Criminally Insane (2012) — Contributor — 97 copies, 6 reviews
Isaac Asimov's Magical Worlds of Fantasy, Volume 7: Magical Wishes (1891) — Contributor — 95 copies, 1 review
Alfred Hitchcock Presents : Stories My Mother Never Told Me (1963) — Contributor — 94 copies, 2 reviews
Alfred Hitchcock Presents: 13 More Stories They Wouldn't Let Me Do On TV (1959) — Contributor — 92 copies, 2 reviews
They Came From Outer Space: 12 Classic Science Fiction Tales That Became Major Motion Pictures (1980) — Contributor — 91 copies, 1 review
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: A Special 25th Anniversary Anthology (1974) — Contributor — 84 copies, 2 reviews
Weird Tales : a selection in facsimile, of the best from the world's most famous fantasy magazine (1976) — Contributor — 82 copies
Time Machines: The Greatest Time Travel Stories Ever Written (1998) — Contributor — 82 copies, 5 reviews
Lighthouse Horrors: Tales of Adventure, Suspense and the Supernatural (1993) — Contributor — 80 copies, 1 review
Famous Fantastic Mysteries: 30 Great Tales of Fantasy and Horror from the Classic Pulp Magazines Famous Fantastic Mysteries & Fantastic Novels (1991) — Contributor — 67 copies, 1 review
A Century of Science Fiction 1950-1959 : The Greatest Stories of the Decade (1996) — Contributor — 64 copies, 2 reviews
Lovers & Other Monsters: A Collection of Amorous Tales of Fantasy, Old and New (1993) — Contributor — 64 copies, 1 review
Nebula Awards 24: SFWA's Choices for the Best Science Fiction and Fantasy 1988 (1990) — Contributor — 61 copies
Vampires, Zombies, Werewolves and Ghosts: 25 Classic Stories of the Supernatural (Signet Classics) (2011) — Contributor — 53 copies, 1 review
Bruce Coville's Book of Spine Tinglers II: More Tales to Make You Shiver (1997) — Contributor — 52 copies
The Edge of the Chair: A Superlative Collection, Some Fact, Some Fiction, All Suspense (1967) — Contributor — 50 copies, 1 review
Arkham's Masters of Horror: A 60th Anniversary Anthology Retrospective of the First 30 Years of Arkham House (2000) — Contributor — 48 copies, 1 review
Infinite Perspectives: Two Thousand Years of Three-Dimensional Mapmaking (1999) — Introduction, some editions — 46 copies, 2 reviews
Field of Fantasies: Baseball Stories of the Strange and Supernatural (2014) — Contributor — 46 copies
Fourth Planet from the Sun: Tales of Mars from the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (2005) — Contributor — 44 copies, 4 reviews
Outsiders: children of wonder: 21 remarkable and fantastic tales (1953) — Contributor — 43 copies, 2 reviews
Science Fiction Hall Of Fame Volume Two. The Greatest Science Fiction Stories Of All Time Chosen By The Members Of The Science Fiction Writers Of America (1970) — Contributor, some editions — 41 copies
The End of the World: and Other Catastrophes (British Library Science Fiction Classics) (2019) — Contributor — 40 copies, 1 review
Alfred Hitchcock Presents : A Baker's Dozen of Suspense Stories (1963) — Contributor — 36 copies, 2 reviews
Grave Predictions: Tales of Mankind’s Post-Apocalyptic, Dystopian and Disastrous Destiny (2016) 35 copies, 7 reviews
Transformations II: Understanding American History Through Science Fiction (1974) — Contributor — 32 copies
Gauntlet: Exploring the Limits of Free Expression, No. 2 - Stephen King Special (1991) — Contributor — 31 copies, 1 review
A Cross of Centuries: Twenty-five Imaginative Tales About the Christ (2007) — Contributor — 30 copies, 2 reviews
The Wild Years 1946-1955 (Amazing Science Fiction Anthology Series) (1987) — Contributor — 27 copies
Transformations: Understanding World History Through Science Fiction (1973) — Contributor — 26 copies
Selected Shorts: A Touch of Magic (Selected Shorts: A Celebration of the Short Story) (2009) — Contributor — 25 copies, 4 reviews
The Best of Both Worlds: An Anthology of Stories for All Ages (1968) — Contributor — 25 copies, 1 review
Science-Fiction Classics: The Stories That Morphed Into Movies (1999) — Contributor — 24 copies, 1 review
All the Fear of the Fair: Uncanny Tales of Circus and Sideshow (2025) — Contributor — 21 copies, 1 review
Kong Unbound: The Cultural Impact, Pop Mythos, and Scientific Plausibility of a Cinematic Legend (2005) — Foreword — 21 copies
Things to Come: An Illustrated History of the Science Fiction Film (1977) — Introduction — 19 copies
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction October/November 1996, Vol. 91, No. 4 & 5 (1996) — Contributor — 18 copies, 1 review
Van Jules Verne tot Isaac Asimov de vijftig beste science fiction verhalen (1981) — Contributor — 16 copies, 1 review
Fremde aus dem All. Lübbes Auswahlband. Science Fiction-Geschichten. (1982) — Contributor, some editions — 15 copies
Postscripts Magazine, Issue 15: Worldcon 2008 Special (2008) — Contributor, some editions — 15 copies
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction October 1988, Vol. 75, No. 4 (1988) — Author — 15 copies
Masters of Shades and Shadows: An Anthology of Great Ghost Stories (1978) — Contributor — 12 copies, 1 review
Special Wonder: The Anthony Boucher Memorial Anthology of Fantasy and Science Fiction (1970) — Contributor — 12 copies
Science Fiction Omnibus: The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1949, 1950 (1952) — Contributor — 11 copies
Nature's Revenge: Eerie Stories of Revolt Against the Human Race (1978) — Contributor — 8 copies, 1 review
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction November 1952, Vol. 3, No. 7 (1952) — Contributor — 8 copies
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction Winter-Spring 1950, Vol. 1, No. 2 (1950) — Contributor — 8 copies
Het dagboek in de sneeuw : en andere griezelverhalen — Contributor — 7 copies
Die Sammlung der Nationalgalerie : 1945-1968 : Der geteilte Himmel : die Dokumentation einer Ausstellung (2014) — Contributor — 6 copies
Best-in-Books: Wind in the Forest / Dandelion Wine Excerpt / Good Ol' Charlie Brown / Dr. Schindler's Woman's Guide to Better Living Excerpt (1958) — Contributor — 5 copies
Tider skal komme : 15 langtidsvarsler : en science fiction-antologi — Contributor — 5 copies
Amazing Stories Vol. 27, No. 4 [April-May 1953] — Author — 4 copies
Star*Reach #6 — Contributor — 3 copies
The Saturday Evening Post Stories 1962 — Contributor — 3 copies
Tordenøglen - og andre historier fra fremmede verdener (1982) — Author, some editions — 2 copies, 1 review
奇想天外 1974年 08月号 レイ・ブラッドベリ大特集 — Contributor — 1 copy
The Record — Author — 1 copy
THREE BY JULES VERNE: Michael Strogoff; Master of the World; The Mysterious Isla (1964) — Introduction, some editions — 1 copy
Weird Tales Volume 38 Number 2, November 1944 — Contributor — 1 copy
Guest of Honor: Harlan Ellison — Illustrator — 1 copy
Hva' nu hvis -? : science fiction - fremtidstænkning (1989) — Author, some editions; Author, some editions — 1 copy, 1 review
The Saturday Evening Post Stories 1957 — Contributor — 1 copy
ナイトランド・クォータリーvol.35 永劫の戦い、終わりなき恐怖 — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Bradbury, Ray
- Legal name
- Bradbury, Raymond Douglas
- Birthdate
- 1920-08-22
- Date of death
- 2012-06-05
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Los Angeles High School, Los Angeles, California, USA (1938)
- Occupations
- novelist
science fiction writer - Organizations
- Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America
National Fantasy Fan Federation [N3F] (cofounder) - Awards and honors
- American Academy of Arts and Letters Academy Award (1954)
World Fantasy Award (Life Achievement, 1977)
Gandalf Award (Grand Master ∙ 1980)
Bram Stoker Award (Lifetime Achievement ∙ 1988)
SFWA Grand Master (1988)
Robert Kirsch Award (1997) (show all 16)
SF Hall Of Fame (Living Inductee ∙ 1999)
International Horror Guild Living Legend (1999)
National Book Award, Medal of Distinguished Contribution to American Letters (2000)
World Horror Convention Grand Master Award (2001)
Hollywood Walk of Fame (2002)
National Medal of Arts (2004)
Pulitzer Prize (Special Citation ∙ 2007)
Commandeur of France's Order of Arts and Letters (2007)
Hugo (Fan Writer ∙ Retro-Hugo ∙ [1939] ∙ 2014)
SFPA Grand Master Award (2008) - Agent
- Don Congdon, (Don Congdon Assoc. ∙ Ltd.)
Julius Schwartz - Cause of death
- undisclosed illness
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Waukegan, Illinois, USA
- Places of residence
- Tucson, Arizona, USA
- Place of death
- Los Angeles, California, USA
- Burial location
- Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery, Los Angeles, California, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Discussions
Reading Short Stories by Ray Bradbury in 26 Short Stories for 2026 (May 4)
Fahrenheit 451 LE - May 5, 2026 in Folio Society Devotees (March 19)
RAY BRADBURY READALONG: The October Country in 75 Books Challenge for 2024 (September 2025)
Easton Press Deluxe Limited Editions (8) in Easton Press Collectors (November 2024)
THE DEEP ONES: "The Crowd" by Ray Bradbury in The Weird Tradition (October 2024)
THE DEEP ONES: "A Touch of Petulance" by Ray Bradbury in The Weird Tradition (September 2024)
Bradbury Readalong? in 75 Books Challenge for 2024 (September 2024)
Ray Bradbury book covers in Gothic Literature (August 2024)
Ray Bradbury Fahrenheit 451, NEW Masterpieces of Science Fiction (Item#3815017; $103) in Easton Press Collectors (July 2023)
LEFTOVER TREASURE Ray Bradbury's Signed Martian Chronicles (Item#2844; $150) in Easton Press Collectors (May 2023)
Ray Bradbury in Legacy Libraries (February 2023)
Martian Chronicles HP in George Macy devotees (February 2023)
THE DEEP ONES: "The Lake" by Ray Bradbury in The Weird Tradition (November 2022)
THE DEEP ONES: "Lorelei of the Red Mist" by Leigh Brackett and Ray Bradbury in The Weird Tradition (November 2022)
Can't Remember the Title--a SF Novel in Name that Book (November 2020)
Nuclear bomb (hinted at) shadows of the children on the building in Name that Book (September 2020)
plain mistress, beautiful wife in Name that Book (April 2016)
THE DEEP ONES: "Usher II" by Ray Bradbury in The Weird Tradition (March 2016)
Ray Bradbury: American Author Challenge in 75 Books Challenge for 2015 (October 2015)
Kammbia1's Review of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 in Science Fiction Fans (March 2013)
December 2012: Ray Bradbury in Monthly Author Reads (December 2012)
Something Wicked This Way Comes - Weekend Group Read _July 7 & 8 in 75 Books Challenge for 2012 (July 2012)
Something Wicked This Way Comes Group Read SPOILER Thread in The Green Dragon (July 2012)
RAY BRADBURY - IN MEMORIAM GROUP READ OF DANDELION WINE in 75 Books Challenge for 2012 (July 2012)
Requiescat in pace, Ray Bradbury in Science Fiction Fans (June 2012)
Something Wicked This Way Comes Group Read NON-SPOILER Thread in The Green Dragon (June 2012)
R.I.P. Ray Bradbury in Folio Society Devotees (June 2012)
I vote for Something Wicked.. As our next read in The Green Dragon (June 2012)
Sci-Fi short story- aftermath of nuclear bomb in Name that Book (October 2010)
SF Short story, Planet with only 1 hour of sun every XX years--kids lock girl in closet when sun com in Name that Book (October 2009)
Short story? Time runs faster on this planet .. lifetime is 15 years or so. in Name that Book (March 2009)
Two More SF Shorts in Name that Book (August 2008)
sci fi short story in Name that Book (August 2008)
while we're on bradbury... in Name that Book (November 2006)
Reviews
Genetic Enchanter
That's what Bradbury called himself in his Introduction, a "genetic enchanter," and Dandelion Wine is "the boy-hid-in-the-man playing in the fields of the Lord."
From the first story, I was under his spell. Bradbury is an exemplar story-teller (think Dickens and Twain, not Joyce and Faulkner). He poured it on as thickly as he liked in this cycle of stories about being a 12 year old boy the summer 1928 in his Illinois hometown. Page after page I whispered, "Oh, yes. Yes! I show more remember that," although my girlhood in New Mexico summers was 40 years after his.
The details are different of course but he captured the universal sensations. Moments of unbearable joy, epiphanies of sadness, a kid's magical thinking, the terror of some boogie man or another, and the wonderment and mystery that seemed to underly everything—as seen by the child-in-the-adult looking back when all childhood summers have condensed into a stream of one continuous long summer, a summer of being alive.
Maybe you should wait until you are at least 40 to read this. (I'm 64.) Let those memories distill into a vintage piquancy to sip along as you read. You know, that intoxicating flavor of nostalgia that gets sweeter as time goes by. In the meantime, read Fahrenheit 451 or The Martian Chronicles or Something Wicked This Way Comes because Bradbury is quite simply a damn good story-teller and no need to deny yourself that pleasure until you are old.
Now I'm on the hunt for a Bradbury I haven't yet read. The Illustrated Man next I think. show less
That's what Bradbury called himself in his Introduction, a "genetic enchanter," and Dandelion Wine is "the boy-hid-in-the-man playing in the fields of the Lord."
From the first story, I was under his spell. Bradbury is an exemplar story-teller (think Dickens and Twain, not Joyce and Faulkner). He poured it on as thickly as he liked in this cycle of stories about being a 12 year old boy the summer 1928 in his Illinois hometown. Page after page I whispered, "Oh, yes. Yes! I show more remember that," although my girlhood in New Mexico summers was 40 years after his.
The details are different of course but he captured the universal sensations. Moments of unbearable joy, epiphanies of sadness, a kid's magical thinking, the terror of some boogie man or another, and the wonderment and mystery that seemed to underly everything—as seen by the child-in-the-adult looking back when all childhood summers have condensed into a stream of one continuous long summer, a summer of being alive.
Maybe you should wait until you are at least 40 to read this. (I'm 64.) Let those memories distill into a vintage piquancy to sip along as you read. You know, that intoxicating flavor of nostalgia that gets sweeter as time goes by. In the meantime, read Fahrenheit 451 or The Martian Chronicles or Something Wicked This Way Comes because Bradbury is quite simply a damn good story-teller and no need to deny yourself that pleasure until you are old.
Now I'm on the hunt for a Bradbury I haven't yet read. The Illustrated Man next I think. show less
“You must stay drunk on writing so reality cannot destroy you. For writing allows just the proper recipes of truth, life, reality as you are able to eat, drink, and digest without hyperventilating and flopping like a dead fish in your bed.”
--Ray Bradbury
That quote from the preface of Ray Bradbury’s [Zen and the Art of Writing] would suit for a review for the entire work. Few books on writing and the writing life communicate the sheer joy, the wonder and elation, that writing provides, show more if given reign. But Bradbury was on to it all early in life. Only the rare writers, like Jack London or Stephen King, are hear the call in their formative years. The result, for them and Bradbury, is that they manage to retain the youthful magic we all lose in maturity and translate it for us so that we can touch it again, even if for a brief moment.
In the opening essay, Run Fast, Stand Still, Bradbury lets us in on one of his secrets – his noun or title lists. Early in life, he began making long lists of simple nouns, not knowing what they would become, or even what they might mean, as he wrote them. But when he needed inspiration, he ran to these lists, and from single words, great monsters and wonders grew. The lesson is to always be open to what life offers, even if it is communicating opaquely at first. Among the nouns in those lists, “The Carnival. The Carousel. The Night Train.” They don’t mean much on their own, but he would select one and just begin writing, vomiting words onto a page in a “long prose-poem-essay.” Somewhere along the middle of the first or second page, he’d come across an idea he liked – a character or a story.
Such a list isn’t much help without an open mind, and a willingness to follow where the mind, subconscious or other, leads. And that’s a tenet that Bradbury constantly repeats:
“What can we writers learn from lizards, lift from birds? In quickness is truth. The faster you blurt, the more swiftly you write, the more honest you are. In hesitation is thought. In delay comes the effort for a style, instead of leaping upon truth which is the only style worth deadfalling or tiger-trapping.”
Natalie Goldberg, in her [Writing Down the Bones] – another Zen treatise on writing – echoes Bradbury’s direction. Just put the words down and let the mind work without that directed thinking. The truth will emerge on its own – the one true thing that Hemingway sought in every sentence. In the essay The Secret Mind, Bradbury comes back to this regimen, that “[t]today’s ideas are blueprinted, mocked-up, engineered, electrified, wound-tight and set loose to rev men up or run men down.” For him, the ideas had to entertain, provoke, and terrify, and they had to flow from the truth that exists underneath. That truth, the one that is truer than real life, is what writers seek, what they rely on to communicate reality so that it’s more real than the everyday.
Another facet of the writing life on which Bradbury and Goldberg agree is on work. There is no failure in writing, only writing. If the work is good, you learn – if it’s bad, you learn more. But the journey is more important than the success; it uncovers more of yourself and the world around you. He says, “the writer who wants to tap into the larger truth in himself must reject the temptations of Joyce or Camus or Tennessee Williams, as exhibited in the literary reviews. He must forget the money waiting for him in mass-circulation. He must ask himself, ‘What do I really think of the world, what do I love, fear, hate?’ and begin to pour this on the paper.”
More than any other book I’ve read on writing, save maybe [The Joy of Writing] by Kenn Amdahl, Bradbury communicates the marvel in the work, the kid-like joy in telling stories for the only good reason people tell stories – to observe and understand the world. It’s unfortunate that more writing programs and literary publications suck that dry from writing. They could learn a thing or two from [Zen and the Art of Writing].
Bottom Line: Ecstasy in the writing life.
5 bones!!!!!
A favorite for the year. show less
--Ray Bradbury
That quote from the preface of Ray Bradbury’s [Zen and the Art of Writing] would suit for a review for the entire work. Few books on writing and the writing life communicate the sheer joy, the wonder and elation, that writing provides, show more if given reign. But Bradbury was on to it all early in life. Only the rare writers, like Jack London or Stephen King, are hear the call in their formative years. The result, for them and Bradbury, is that they manage to retain the youthful magic we all lose in maturity and translate it for us so that we can touch it again, even if for a brief moment.
In the opening essay, Run Fast, Stand Still, Bradbury lets us in on one of his secrets – his noun or title lists. Early in life, he began making long lists of simple nouns, not knowing what they would become, or even what they might mean, as he wrote them. But when he needed inspiration, he ran to these lists, and from single words, great monsters and wonders grew. The lesson is to always be open to what life offers, even if it is communicating opaquely at first. Among the nouns in those lists, “The Carnival. The Carousel. The Night Train.” They don’t mean much on their own, but he would select one and just begin writing, vomiting words onto a page in a “long prose-poem-essay.” Somewhere along the middle of the first or second page, he’d come across an idea he liked – a character or a story.
Such a list isn’t much help without an open mind, and a willingness to follow where the mind, subconscious or other, leads. And that’s a tenet that Bradbury constantly repeats:
“What can we writers learn from lizards, lift from birds? In quickness is truth. The faster you blurt, the more swiftly you write, the more honest you are. In hesitation is thought. In delay comes the effort for a style, instead of leaping upon truth which is the only style worth deadfalling or tiger-trapping.”
Natalie Goldberg, in her [Writing Down the Bones] – another Zen treatise on writing – echoes Bradbury’s direction. Just put the words down and let the mind work without that directed thinking. The truth will emerge on its own – the one true thing that Hemingway sought in every sentence. In the essay The Secret Mind, Bradbury comes back to this regimen, that “[t]today’s ideas are blueprinted, mocked-up, engineered, electrified, wound-tight and set loose to rev men up or run men down.” For him, the ideas had to entertain, provoke, and terrify, and they had to flow from the truth that exists underneath. That truth, the one that is truer than real life, is what writers seek, what they rely on to communicate reality so that it’s more real than the everyday.
Another facet of the writing life on which Bradbury and Goldberg agree is on work. There is no failure in writing, only writing. If the work is good, you learn – if it’s bad, you learn more. But the journey is more important than the success; it uncovers more of yourself and the world around you. He says, “the writer who wants to tap into the larger truth in himself must reject the temptations of Joyce or Camus or Tennessee Williams, as exhibited in the literary reviews. He must forget the money waiting for him in mass-circulation. He must ask himself, ‘What do I really think of the world, what do I love, fear, hate?’ and begin to pour this on the paper.”
More than any other book I’ve read on writing, save maybe [The Joy of Writing] by Kenn Amdahl, Bradbury communicates the marvel in the work, the kid-like joy in telling stories for the only good reason people tell stories – to observe and understand the world. It’s unfortunate that more writing programs and literary publications suck that dry from writing. They could learn a thing or two from [Zen and the Art of Writing].
Bottom Line: Ecstasy in the writing life.
5 bones!!!!!
A favorite for the year. show less
Yes, everybody, my last name is Bradbury. Does that mean I’m related to Ray Bradbury? No.
Does that mean every English teacher I’ve ever had has asked me if I’m related to Ray Bradbury? Yes.
Does that mean I’m slightly biased when giving book reviews? Maybe…
All jokes aside, I thought this collection of stories was fantastic. Because my days this week have been so busy, I often ended up listening to the audiobook as I was winding down for bed, in some cases resulting in me setting show more a sleep timer (then resetting it because I’m too engrossed in the story and can’t fall asleep, then resetting it again, then resetting it again).
It was the perfect way to end my day and even resulted in me having odd dreams about my family escaping the doomed planet Earth in a tiny rocket.
(My dream self ran back to get my Bible -awww- and barely made it out in time. Then, as we are flying away, the terrible realization hits — I forgot my highlighters. Crying emoji for days.) I’d also like to note that for some reason my brother wasn’t there escaping the desolate hellscape with us, but I’m just gonna go ahead and presume he was already on Mars.
This is the power of books, people! show less
Does that mean every English teacher I’ve ever had has asked me if I’m related to Ray Bradbury? Yes.
Does that mean I’m slightly biased when giving book reviews? Maybe…
All jokes aside, I thought this collection of stories was fantastic. Because my days this week have been so busy, I often ended up listening to the audiobook as I was winding down for bed, in some cases resulting in me setting show more a sleep timer (then resetting it because I’m too engrossed in the story and can’t fall asleep, then resetting it again, then resetting it again).
It was the perfect way to end my day and even resulted in me having odd dreams about my family escaping the doomed planet Earth in a tiny rocket.
(My dream self ran back to get my Bible -awww- and barely made it out in time. Then, as we are flying away, the terrible realization hits — I forgot my highlighters. Crying emoji for days.) I’d also like to note that for some reason my brother wasn’t there escaping the desolate hellscape with us, but I’m just gonna go ahead and presume he was already on Mars.
This is the power of books, people! show less
I have never tasted dandelion wine, but I feel like I can conjure it to my lips. The aroma from the old, cloudy bottle is redolent of nostalgia; a cloying scent of freshly cut grass and your nan's culinary magic undercut by a sweaty, fetid, almost smegmacious, stench that coats the sinuses. The first sip effervescing on the tongue; an explosion of ecstacy, as if standing in Wonka's factory as the bombs fall. Every sweet and sour taste is there, so perfectly overwhelming in their apotheosis. show more Now the nose is running, mouth watering, tastebuds fizzing. The palette, now roused by this wondrous sensation, yawns and stretches, before rolling over and awaiting the flavours to bathe it. Boiling treacle reaches out with tentacles of nostalgia, strangling the palette, coating it in choking oil, even as the bittersweet bit in its mouth keeps it distracted. Your mouth is held open, a foie gras funnel forced down your gullet as the sickly, gritty substance is pushed inside. You choke and splutter, while faceless family members and your imaginary friends comfort you, whispering the exact exquisite words you always needed to hear to be complete. You feel calm for a moment, enjoying the embrace and savouring the sugary alcoholic bite, and what it's doing to you. The spigot is turns all the way, filling you with gloop, until you explode and lay among the tatters of everything else that wasn't in the recipe. show less
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Awards
The Martian Chronicles (Bradbury – A Tribute to Ray Bradbury, An Author from Waukegan, Illinois – 2019)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (Bradbury – A Tribute to Ray Bradbury, An Author from Waukegan, Illinois – 2019)
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