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Name the Ray Bradbury Story

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13 April 2011, 11:33 AM
philnic
Name the Ray Bradbury Story
I can, but I don't want the responsibility of coming up with the next quotation!


- Phil

Deputy Moderator | Visit my Bradbury website: www.bradburymedia.co.uk | Listen to my Bradbury 100 podcast: https://tinyurl.com/bradbury100pod
14 April 2011, 06:23 PM
Braling II
Oh, all right.
"And So Died Riabouchinska"!

OK. Try this:

"Show me the crayfish and the butterflies," she said.
14 April 2011, 08:13 PM
Doug Spaulding
quote:
Originally posted by Braling II:
"Show me the crayfish and the butterflies," she said.

Awww... that's a sweet story.


"Live Forever!"
14 April 2011, 08:16 PM
Linnl
Braling II replied:
quote:
Oh, all right.
"And So Died Riabouchinska"!



Right, of course! And the alternate title is "The Golden Box" as it appeared in The Saint Detective Magazine(U.K.)March, 1957 (info. found in Ray Bradbury The Life of Fiction by Eller and Touponce.) What is fascinating is the psychological take Bradbury makes in having a murderer's conscience confess for him through such utter and obsessive immersion in his art. Nothing supernatural about it.

It is Braling II's turn and he wrote
quote:
OK. Try this:

"Show me the crayfish and the butterflies," she said.

Cool
16 April 2011, 12:05 AM
Braling II
A very sweet story indeed.
So Doug, did you Google the quote or remember it? Care to give the title?


By the way inspired by "Ria", I've begun re-reading "Machineries of Joy". God! What great writing! I've read the stories through "Boys! Raise Giant Mushrooms..." and am newly amazed...
16 April 2011, 08:42 AM
fjp451
http://www.youtube.com/results...rt+1%2C+2%2C+3+&aq=f


Down right creepy...enjoy!
f
16 April 2011, 06:13 PM
Doug Spaulding
quote:
Originally posted by Braling II:
A very sweet story indeed.
So Doug, did you Google the quote or remember it? Care to give the title?

Very well. I'll give it:

I'll Never Forget You. I just read it recently, actually. Who could forget crayfish?!


"Live Forever!"
17 April 2011, 03:09 PM
Braling II
Actually, it's "A Story of Love" (in "Long After Midnight"). Two titles for the same story, perhaps?
18 April 2011, 12:19 AM
philnic
quote:
Originally posted by Braling II:
...Two titles for the same story, perhaps?


Correct. Although two different-lengthed versions exist, but I can't remember whether this correlates with the two different titles.


- Phil

Deputy Moderator | Visit my Bradbury website: www.bradburymedia.co.uk | Listen to my Bradbury 100 podcast: https://tinyurl.com/bradbury100pod
18 April 2011, 08:51 PM
Doug Spaulding
Yes, same story. I didn't read it from LONG AFTER MIDNIGHT recently. I disremember where. Perhaps a reprint from the magazine it was originally published in.

"The men of earth came to Mars."


"Live Forever!"
19 April 2011, 06:22 AM
Linnl
I hear there's work available in the sky. Doug Spalding's Name this Ray Bradbury Story Line:
quote:
"The men of earth came to Mars."


From the bridge short short story "The Settlers".

Mars. Speaking of which, Colonial Radio Theatre has audio clips of their forthcoming release of Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles.

http://www.colonialradio.com/HTML/whatsnew.html
19 April 2011, 06:53 AM
Doug Spaulding
quote:
Originally posted by Linnl:
From the bridge short short story "The Settlers".

Correct.


"Live Forever!"
19 April 2011, 08:11 AM
Linnl
From another, and lovely short:

"There waited the great pool of grass with its tender heads of clover and its devil weed, with its old acorns hidden, with its ant civilizations."
30 April 2011, 12:09 AM
Braling II
Nobody's biting.
Another clew, mayhaps?
02 May 2011, 07:51 PM
Linnl
Apologies, Braling II, if this short-short story is from a (recent) collection you have not read yet:

"As the body of a boy on a sweltering July day yearns toward swimming holes, so the feet are drawn to oceans of oak-cooled grass and seas of minted clover and dew."