Marionettes, Inc.
In Marionettes, Inc., Ray Bradbury offers his devoted readers something both special and unexpected: a unified view of one small corner of a varied fictional universe. In five stories (one of them original to this collection, plus a rare, previously unpublished screen treatment), Bradbury explores the concept of Robotics and examines its impact on the day-to-day lives of ordinary people.
Several of these tales, including "Changeling" and "Punishment Without Crime," are set in a world in which the eponymous company, Marionettes, Inc., has successfully created incredibly detailed replicas of existing men and women. When these surrogate "people" take their place in the real, often messy realm of human relationships, the results are sometimes tragic, sometimes ironic, and always surprising.
But the true heart of this resonant collection is the classic novella, "I Sing the Body Electric." In this quintessential Bradbury story, an "electric Grandma" enters the lives of a grieving, newly motherless family, and slowly restores their capacity for wonder and joy. Like the very best of Bradbury's fiction, it is a magical, deeply felt account of hope, growth, survival, and change, and a moving meditation on what it really means to be human.
Marionettes, Inc. will be printed in two colors throughout, and feature a full-color dust jacket, as well as pen and ink illustrations at the head of each story by Mark A. Nelson.
Contents:
- I Sing the Body Electric
- Marionettes, Inc.
- Changeling
- Punishment without Crime
- Wind-up World (previously unpublished)
- Murder by Facsimile (screen treatment, previously unpublished)
"Cherry-picking the marionette-themed pieces from Bradbury's extensive
oeuvre creates a nicely unified tone... The end result is most appealing
to Bradbury completists and those who want a good introduction to his
work." – Publishers Weekly
Ray Bradbury
Ray Douglas Bradbury (1920-2012) was an American fantasy, horror, science fiction, and mystery writer. Best known for his dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451 (1953) and for the science fiction stories gathered together as The Martian Chronicles (1950) and The Illustrated Man (1951), Bradbury is one of the most celebrated among 20th and 21st century American writers of speculative fiction.