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Can someone tell me about the car accident Ray Bradbury witnessed in his youth? I'm doing a report on him and I thought it would be interesting.
 
Posts: 1 | Location: Wisconsin | Registered: 12 May 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Ray witnessed this accident when very young, and the person's head was mangled, enough physical damage to make young Ray fear of ever driving a car... a fear that lasted his entire life. Where this happened, and exactly how old Ray was, and how young or old the victim was, perhaps can be answered by others more aquainted with the incident.
 
Posts: 2280 | Location: Laguna Woods, California | Registered: 28 June 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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NK, yes! I believe it was also the motivation of the s.s. entitled "The Crowd."


fpalumbo
 
Posts: 732 | Registered: 29 November 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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As I recall, Ray was 15 years old, the worst possible age to witness such an event. At 10, a person would have five years to get over it before obtaining a learner's permit. At 16, they'd already be driving and have crossed that hurdle, but at 15, if that was learner's permit age in California then, as it certainly is in other states....

He was at a friend's house in a deserted area of L. A. when they heard a horrible noise. I forget whether two cars hit each other (I may be confusing it with an accident my uncle witnessed around the same time) and then one hit a pole, or whether only one car alone hit a pole, but anyhow, the car was sheared in half, blood, guts, and dead and dying bodies all over the place.

What inspired "The Crowd" was there were no buildings near his friend's house, and yet in minutes a large crowd assembled. Nothing was nearby but a deserted warehouse and a cemetery. So Ray wondered where did all those people come from--the deserted warehouse, or the cemetery?

Ray was terribly traumatized, walked home running into trees and wasn't normal for months. Never learned to drive. As it turned out later, his eyes were very bad. He wore Coke bottle-thick glasses from the age of 10 and was rejected from being in the service in WWII due to his eyes, so couldn't have seen well enough to drive successfully anyhow. I might add, if I lived in a place with traffic like Los Angeles, I'd never have learned to drive either!
 
Posts: 2694 | Location: Dayton, Washington, USA | Registered: 03 December 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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The scene from F451 when Montag is crossing the ten-laned high speed roadway sure does call up my own experiences with the LA Freeway the two times I have visited California. Fast, vast, and merciless!

[This message has been edited by fjpalumbo (edited 05-13-2004).]


fpalumbo
 
Posts: 732 | Registered: 29 November 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I always thought it was strange that a man traumatized by a horrific car crash would rather put his fate in the hands of another person driving than to drive himself. Does that mean that he trusted his own ablilties far less than those of other people? Has he ever taken cabs, or does he only ride with people he knows well enough to trust that their driving is safe? Could it be that he did get over his fear a couple years later, but by then he just never cared to drive, and used the accident as an excuse? Just wondering. Please don't think I'm putting him down, I don't mean to, I just don't understand. I think it is very odd.
 
Posts: 411 | Location: Azusa, CA | Registered: 11 February 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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His excuse for not driving a car was, "I didn't have money for one until I was 32 years old, and you don't learn to do things when you're 32 years old." Yes, he did trust just about anyone's driving over his own--he was afraid he'd commit "massacres" behind the wheel of a vehicle. I don't know if that was due to his eyesight, personality factors, or some combination. Yes, he rode in cabs and even accepted rides from strangers! His only request was that he be allowed to "cower in the back seat." One day he was on a street corner in L. A., I think on foot--he often took his bike but may have been walking that day--and a young woman driving alone just pulled over and picked him up! She had no idea who he was and he was asking her, is this advisable, to just pick up strangers off the street? She replied, "You looked very English and very safe." He and the interviewer had to laugh over that--"You don't want to look safe." He said driving was "Like sex and a 12-year-old--you don't miss what you've never had."
 
Posts: 2694 | Location: Dayton, Washington, USA | Registered: 03 December 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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