Crossposted from Approximately 8,000 Words

Ray Bradbury pontificates (Photo by Caleb Sconosciuto).
My old friend Kate Sheehan broke the news to me today via Twitter that Ray Bradbury has died.
I knew it was coming; No one lives forever and he was 91. The news was still a blow when I read it. Today is a sad day.
Bradbury first came into my hands when I was very young, which is probably the best time to encounter him. My mother forced a copy of R is for Rocket (somehow out of print!) on me. I say forced, because what I recall is a fair amount of reluctance. I don’t remember how old I was, except that I’d only recently discovered that reading was both easy and awesome. That the title was a joke on an imaginary children’s alphabet was lost on me, so I thought it was actually a book for kids; I was at one of those juvenile ages where things that seemed juvenile repulsed me.
Eventually I relented. I don’t remember my reactions to the stories themselves so much as what came after — a lifelong love of both Bradbury’s work and science fiction in general. I read everything by him I could find, from his horror and sf through to his more conventional works about life in Ireland. As a boy, I loved his paeans to boyhood and the joy of fresh new sneakers in Dandelion Wine. I read The Martian Chronicles over and over, breaking the spines of multiple copies.
One of the most visceral experiences I can remember having with a book was while rereading that classic of war and censorship, Fahrenheit 451. I lay on my bed in my father’s house, completely absorbed in the story, my surroundings having disappeared. As the protagonist Montague flees (pursued, if I recall, by his fellow firemen), fighter jets roar overhead. Simultaneously, a jet passed over our house in the real world. The bottom fell out from under me, and for a long moment I genuinely did not know where I was.
Bradbury was there with me during my early battles with authority figures. I remember fighting with a misguided librarian until she let me read Elanor Cameron’s The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet, which had been placed on a shelf designated for grade levels older than mine. I was secure that my new found love of the genre would protect me from the imagined damage caused by any “hard words” I encountered. More directly, he once got me sent to the principal’s office. We were reading one of his books in class (maybe Dandelion Wine), and the teacher said we could just skip over any “overly descriptive passages.” If you’ve ever seen me really angry, you can probably imagine what happened next.
Ray Bradbury at his best is science fiction at its best — making the reader think about new possibilities while reflecting back on us in the startling new perspective of a fisheye lens. While writing about the alien, the futuristic, or the monstrous, he shed light on what it means to be human — the humor and the horror of it and, once in a while, a glimpse of how we could be better humans too.
Thank you. You will be missed.



27 Comments

Sitting here with tears and such memories … from my own first encounter with R is for Rocket to the wonder of your discovery of it (after the forcing!)
What a man, what a writer and what a force of joy and amazement.
How/where did you first encounter R is for Rocket?
A lovely tribute.
Well, that’s the last of the big five I cut my sci-fi teeth on: Howard, Heinlein, Assimov, Clarke and Bradbury. Bummer but recommended. Thanks Kit.
Bradbury was a modern day Mark Twain, in many ways. And I say that with due defference to Twains’ genius.
They both wrote stories that appeal to the young, and young at heart.
They both wrote simply and concisely, a skill every writer can admire.
It is good to see such a great man live to a ripe old age.
Nice post. Thanks.
I guess when you’ve reached your 90′s and world-wide civilization is closer to becoming the dystopian nightmare you warned against 50 years ago – it’s probably time to shuffle off this mortal coil. I can only hope that Fahrenheit 451 is re-discovered by more folks who can see that without real change, we’re destined to live that nightmare in our lifetimes.
And Safe Journey, Ray…you will be missed.
Damn Kit. Incredibly well done.
I loved Bradbury for his work. Some of the most exciting reads of my childhood. I went online and ordered a number of his books today when I first heard of his passing. I find my little home library is lacking in his works.
Hmmm … I discovered R is for Rocket in 6th grade when it had just come out. It – and Wrinkle in Time – really entranced a group of us. Both were intellectually provocative and also so humane … a very precious combination. As I remember it, we oddly did not head into other science fiction – so much of which at the time seemed rather dull. Instead, we also read a lot of fantasy – Edward Eager for example but it was the Bradbury stories that have stayed embedded ever since.
Further thought has brought me to this conclusion – As you mention above, Kit, the real value of Bradbury’s work (among others) was that it taught me how to think, or as you so eloquently put it
My wife grabbed a copy of Of Mice and Men from the library today. I’m going to read it later tonight or tomorrow. Books like these are so valuable and a huge part of what is lacking from our society today. Critical and abstract thinking were instrumental to the success of America in previous generations. From the early 1800s all the way into the 1980s. The great books taught us to think.
I’m kind of rambling. Losses like this make me reflect on myself, my past, my beliefs, etc.
Thank you for the great post.
I think you make a very apt comparison to Twain!
It’s definitely time for me to reread Fahrenheit 451. I’m very curious to see how I react to it this time through. I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve read it.
My favorite reading was in the late 1950s or so. You mentioned Cameron’s “. . .Mushroom Planet.” I remember that, too, and recall a sequel. How about Latham’s “Five Against Venus”? Another great one, also with a sequel.
Thanks for sharing. Early exposure L’Engle definitely shaped my thinking and my personality too!
The Onion.
I’m glad so many have enjoyed this post. It seems we have some common experiences with his work and the others of great authors like him, if not in the specifics than in the emotions involved. I completely agree that one of the things great SF and literature in general can do for us is show us how to look at the world, new ways of thinking, and glimpses into others’ minds.
To expand, perhaps they teach us to think while also teaching us a little of how others’ think. Almost telepathy.
Thank you.
Truly. When we are confronted by contrary ideas it’s in our nature to argue. When we’re reading there’s nobody to argue with. We’re forced to absorb the contrary viewpoints and ideologies, thus expanding our own minds.
I find that the stories I enjoy most, like the films I enjoy most, are the ones that leave me thinking and trying to process my feelings. The ones that leave me confused and a little uncomfortable. These are the ones that force me to expand my horizons.
My daughter is finishing the Hunger Games Trilogy as we speak. She’s got about 15 pages left of the final book. Her questions, feelings, insights and experiences have been wonderful. I read the books recently because I object to seeing films based on books if I haven’t read the books. My wife wanted to see The Hunger Games so I bought the series. They were pretty neat little stories. Not horizon expanding stories, but a good light read.
Reading great fiction has so many benefits. The men and women who give us those stories are treasures.
According to the almighty Wikipedia, Cameron wrote Six Books in the Mushroom Planet series. I read them all once, and enjoyed them all at the age I read them, but they definitely become less about vaguely psychedelic journeys to the mushroom planet and more about Mr. Bass, time travel, and mythology as they proceed.
I’ve never read Latham, but I’ll have to keep an eye out.
Perfect Onion headline!
Like in “The Martian Chronicles”. Boy, does this bring back memories of my teens.
Now That is Irony.
Kit…that was a truly beautiful tribute.
RBG
When I had my job in L.A., I worked with a woman who knew a number of great Sci-Fi writers that would hang out together. (She’d known Charles Beaumont when she was a teen.) Last year, on Ray’s birthday, she took my copy of [i]The Twilight Zone Companion[/i] to their gathering and got it signed by George Clayton Johnson, [i]Companion[/i] author Marc Zicree, and others.
Ray wasn’t there (due to health issues) and I wasn’t invited, anyway. (And I had to work, although given my eventual sacking, I suppose I could have blown it off.) But I still felt great regret that I didn’t get to meet a man of such gifts. And now I never shall.
But his gifts remain. For all of us. Onward, Ray, onward.
Yes I wish I had been able to meet him as well. I’m glad we’ll always have his words.
To everyone: About to head down to Occupy for the evening but it means a great deal to me that this tribute post seems to have reached so many people.
Thanks Kit for keeping this diary up a little longer than most. I always wanted to thank Bradbury for fueling my imagination as a kid but never did avail myself the opportunity. Thank you Mr. Bradbury – you sparked many a lunchtime discussion amongst myself and my friends. Those discussions were started when someone would ask “Has anyone read …(fill in the blank with title)?” My gratitude to you Mr. Bradbury. RIP, good man, you certainly found a place in my heart and soul ages ago.