| A Blade of Grass (1942) 3,000 words A Blade of Grass (1943) 3,000 words Are these different stories? (I maintain Ray Bradbury's bibliography for the Russian site FantLab, and I try to keep it as accurate as possible.) |
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| Posts: 702 | Location: Cape Town, South Africa | Registered: 29 December 2001 |
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| I would expect that the two listings of A Blade of Grass refer to the same story, but possibly to different manuscript versions. One of the fascinating things that I expect to emerge from this new scholarly edition is a much clearer picture of the timescale of Bradbury's composition-submission-publication cycle than we have ever had. (To many of us, the stories existed only from their first book appearance. To some of us, the first magazine appearance will be known. But very few of us know how long Bradbury or his agent had a given story in circulation before it was bought for magazine publication, and very few of us know how long Bradbury wrestled with a story before even sending it out.) THE LIFE OF FICTION goes a long way to addressing this, particularly for the stories that ended up as parts of novels, but this new edition should illuminate all the short stories. |
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| Posts: 6909 | Location: 11 South Saint James Street, Green Town, Illinois | Registered: 02 October 2002 |
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| That belongs in the updates from Prof Eller thread! |
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| quote: Originally posted by philnic: That belongs in the updates from Prof Eller thread!
Well!
"Live Forever!"
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| Posts: 6909 | Location: 11 South Saint James Street, Green Town, Illinois | Registered: 02 October 2002 |
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| Don't look!I got my professors mixed up! One can't swing a dead cat without hitting a professor around here!
"Live Forever!"
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| Posts: 6909 | Location: 11 South Saint James Street, Green Town, Illinois | Registered: 02 October 2002 |
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| They should be called "uncollected (except by djmonolith)"! The critical edition sensibly separates out the amateur efforts (mostly written for fanzines) from the professional ones. The amateur pieces are, I think, for Bradbury specialists; they have little significance except in relationship to Bradbury's other works. The early pro stuff includes some great work. "The Small Assassin" is amongst this bunch, and is a remarkably mature piece of writing for so early in his career. |
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