I Could Not Deal With The Fact That Every First Line In That Quiz Was Formatted Like This.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I have only ever read Fahrenheit 451 and some of his short stories. I should fix that.
"The Homecoming", From Dust Returned (which is about the family in "The Homecoming", and Something Wicked This Way Comes. Those are my recommendations.
(Did anyone have a bet with themselves as to how long it would take me to make that sort of post? Anyone?)
I think my first encounter with Bradbury was the October Country collection. Man, there was some messed-up stuff in there.
Oh, and:
It's big, it's broad, it's broad, it's bright,
It fills the sky of All Hallow's Night
The strangest sight you've ever seen,
The monster tree on Halloween.
Mike Wallace interviewed Ray Bradbury the night of the Apollo 11 moon landing - you can watch it here:
(Hopefully that link works - there's a slight chance you might need to be logged in in order to view it.)
I love his writing book, Zen and the art of [memfault]. The imagery of his town is glorious.
Zen In The Art Of Writing.
Jillian, I actually have Something Wicked This Way Comes based on you recommending it, so that is what I will read when I am done with my current book.
The Halloween Tree has always been one of my favorites.
In South America Bradbury is considered to be one of the all time great short story writers, and even Borges praised him. Which is a round about way of saying that his writing style is very consistent with their tradition of magic realism and is not consigned to a genre.
Some of his short stories are incredibly unnerving, especially ones like "The Playground" which I just learned was made into a tv version for the Raymond Bradbury Theater anthology show, and it stars William Shatner!
To me, "Skeleton," about the man whose bones hurt, is the most unnerving story there is. "The Small Assassin" is way up there too.