The Martian Chronicles
Bradbury's Mars is a place of hope, dreams and metaphor-of crystal pillars and fossil seas-where a fine dust settles on the great, empty cities of a silently destroyed civilization. It is here the invaders have come to despoil and commercialize, to grow and to learn - first a trickle, then a torrent, rushing from a world with no future toward a promise of tomorrow. The Earthman conquers Mars... and then is conquered by it, lulled by dangerous lies of comfort and familiarity, and enchanted by the lingering glamour of an ancient, mysterious native race.
Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles is a classic work of twentieth-century literature whose extraordinary power and imagination remain undimmed by time's passage. In connected, chronological stories, a true grandmaster once again enthralls, delights and challenges us with his vision and his heart - starkly and stunningly exposing in brilliant spacelight our strength, our weakness, our folly, and our poignant humanity on a strange and breathtaking world where humanity does not belong.
Contents:
- Rocket Summer
- Ylla
- The Summer Night
- The Earth Men
- The Taxpayer
- The Third Expedition
- And the Moon Be Still as Bright
- The Settlers
- The Green Moming
- The Locusts
- Night Meeting
- The Shore
- The Fire Balloons
- Interim
- The Musicians
- The Wilderness
- The Naming of Names
- Usher II
- The Old Ones
- The Martian
- The Luggage Store
- The Off Season
- The Watchers
- The Silent Towns
- The Long Years
- There Will Come Soft Rains
- The Million-Year Picnic
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.