Ginger, those are the two I was thinking of from The October Country. Brrrrr.
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."
91 is pretty close to forever, for us humans.
Sadly.
I got all but the Narnia. I find that I'm okay with that.
This is me as well.
Sparky you are awesome for looking. Now I need to visit UCLA's library and see if they possibly have backcopies. ERIC might help.
eta Nope. Not UCLA. Though USC and CSUN both have that edition, according to ERIC.
I read my father's Bradbury books when I was young - possibly too young - but I loved many, found some unnerving, but always worth reading. They were books I never outgrew or got tired of. There were stories in one of his later collections - The Toynbee Convector - that I can still remember clearly.
From The New Yorker (sci-fi issue is the latest), this may be Bradbury's last published piece:
And I think on-line New Yorker only, a nice memorium:
Kat, UCLA's catalog indicates they do have a copy on campus, so take a look at that rather than ERIC or Melvyl, etc.
And I think on-line New Yorker only, a nice memorium:
That is a very hearfelt valediction.
Hec, from that same issue, you'd probably enjoy this article by Colson Whitehead about growing up watching horror/sci-fi movies: [link]
I read that, Frank! Pretty cool. Weird seeing all the kids who grew up on science fiction/horror in the New Yorker (Chabon, Junot Diaz, Whitehead...)
So, you said you're coming out to SF? What are the dates again? Maybe we can find something fun to see at the Castro while you're in town.