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Name the Ray Bradbury Story

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08 November 2010, 06:10 PM
Linnl
Name the Ray Bradbury Story
fjp451 wrote
quote:
Did the robotics references raise your recognition!?

Yes they did. The youtube posted is impressive, if not kind of scary. Just as scary are humans without a conscience, and perhaps thats partly a take on "Punishment Without Crime."

For any and all interested, here is the next quote:

"But there was no word and the veins did not rest easy in the wrists and the heart was a bellows forever blowing upon a little coal of fear, forever illumining and making it into a cherry light, again, pulse, and again an ingrown light which her inner eyes stared upon with unwanting fascination."

Good luck!
13 November 2010, 05:34 PM
Linnl
Another line:

"A tiny hole of sunlight from the window-shade lay on his chin and picked out, like the spikes of a music-box cylinder, each little hair on his face."
20 November 2010, 01:06 PM
Linnl
A final clue/line:

"The Death Festival was gone."
28 November 2010, 11:17 AM
Linnl
The as yet unproduced screenplay, The Catacombs, based on the story in question is soon to be published by Gauntlet Publications.
01 December 2010, 02:48 PM
Linnl
Any guesses, wild or contained, are welcome.
01 December 2010, 04:18 PM
tinkerbell
A contained guess: The Next in Line?
01 December 2010, 05:13 PM
Linnl
YES! It's "The Next in Line." Your turn tinkerbell.

Photographer Archie Lieberman

http://www.archielieberman.com/

photographed the mummies of Guanajuato, Mexico in the 1970s. After leaving Mexico he was reminded that Ray Bradbury wrote a story about the mummuies thirty years before. His book The Mummies of Guanajuato features black and white photos of Guanajuato along with Bradbury's story.
A stage adaptation of the story was adapted by Sid Stebel and Charles Rome Smith. And a BBC radio adaptation by Brian Sibley.

Does anyone know if the stage adaptation is published?
02 December 2010, 11:37 AM
philnic
quote:
Originally posted by Linnl:
...Does anyone know if the stage adaptation is published?


I've never seen a published adaptation.


- Phil

Deputy Moderator | Visit my Bradbury website: www.bradburymedia.co.uk | Listen to my Bradbury 100 podcast: https://tinyurl.com/bradbury100pod
02 December 2010, 05:13 PM
Linnl
Thank you. Apologies for not being specific. I was wondering if the play (or book) had ever been published.
03 December 2010, 12:44 AM
philnic
I think I understood the question - and my answer stands! To the best of my knowledge, the only plays based on Bradbury to have been published are his own dramatisations, which are available from Dramatic Publishing (www.dramaticpublishing.com), plus a couple of collections of his plays. THE NEXT IN LINE is not among them.


- Phil

Deputy Moderator | Visit my Bradbury website: www.bradburymedia.co.uk | Listen to my Bradbury 100 podcast: https://tinyurl.com/bradbury100pod
03 December 2010, 01:46 PM
tinkerbell
"My talk with you has helped clarify things. Nobody thought an airplane would ever fly, nobody thought an atom would ever explode, and nobody thinks that there can ever be Peace, but there will be."
04 December 2010, 02:49 AM
philnic
At first, I thought "The Toynbee Convector"...but then I decided "A Piece of Wood"!


- Phil

Deputy Moderator | Visit my Bradbury website: www.bradburymedia.co.uk | Listen to my Bradbury 100 podcast: https://tinyurl.com/bradbury100pod
04 December 2010, 03:49 AM
tinkerbell
I wood say that's the correct answer. Over to you, maestro.
04 December 2010, 09:12 AM
philnic
OK, left's go for something a little bit more obscure. Name this Bradbury story:

"In a brief second they had felt they were falling. They felt themselves hit the floor many times. Then the machine ceased its crazy antics and stopped at the main floor."


- Phil

Deputy Moderator | Visit my Bradbury website: www.bradburymedia.co.uk | Listen to my Bradbury 100 podcast: https://tinyurl.com/bradbury100pod
04 December 2010, 10:36 AM
fjp451
Off the top of my head...though not necessarily an accurate surmise...The City! Perhaps?