Author
Ray Bradbury
Ray Bradbury (1920-2012) wrote Fahrenheit 451, The Martian Chronicles, Something Wicked This Way Comes, Dandelion Wine, and roughly six hundred short stories that defined the lyrical-literary register of mid-twentieth-century American science fiction. The October country still belongs to him.
Reviews
6
Books on file
6
Avg rating
Years active
2002-2004
Reviewed
Our reviews of Ray Bradbury's work

Bradbury Stories: 100 of His Most Celebrated Tales
by Ray Bradbury
The career-spanning Ray Bradbury short fiction selection. As close to a complete introduction as a single volume gets.

I Live by the Invisible: New & Selected Poems
by Ray Bradbury
I Live by the Invisible: New and Selected Poems by Ray Bradbury 2002 review. A two-hundred-poem retrospective from Bradbury's six decades of verse-writing.

Let's All Kill Constance
by Ray Bradbury
Ray Bradbury's 2003 LA noir. The third novel in his unnamed-narrator LA sequence. Late Bradbury at his strangest and most affectionate.

The Best Of The Ray Bradbury Chronicles : The Graphic Novel
by Ray Bradbury
The Best of the Ray Bradbury Chronicles: The Graphic Novel review. The 2003 NBM Comics collection adapting nine of Bradbury's short stories with artists including P. Craig Russell and Mike Mignola.

The Cat's Pajamas
by Ray Bradbury
Ray Bradbury's 2004 short story collection. Late Bradbury at his most elegiac and his most accessible. A small good book.

They Have Not Seen the Stars: The Collected Poetry of Ray Bradbury
by Ray Bradbury
They Have Not Seen the Stars by Ray Bradbury review. A 2002 collected poetry volume. Late-Bradbury verse at its most lyrical and most accessible.
The takes
What we have said about Ray Bradbury
The career-spanning Ray Bradbury short fiction selection. As close to a complete introduction as a single volume gets.
Ray Bradbury's 2003 LA noir. The third novel in his unnamed-narrator LA sequence. Late Bradbury at his strangest and most affectionate.
Ray Bradbury's 2004 short story collection. Late Bradbury at his most elegiac and his most accessible. A small good book.
They Have Not Seen the Stars by Ray Bradbury review. A 2002 collected poetry volume. Late-Bradbury verse at its most lyrical and most accessible.
I Live by the Invisible: New and Selected Poems by Ray Bradbury 2002 review. A two-hundred-poem retrospective from Bradbury's six decades of verse-writing.
The Best of the Ray Bradbury Chronicles: The Graphic Novel review. The 2003 NBM Comics collection adapting nine of Bradbury's short stories with artists including P. Craig Russell and Mike Mignola.