Who is Ray Bradbury?

  Рет қаралды 18,352

Sci-Fi Odyssey

Sci-Fi Odyssey

Күн бұрын

Ray Bradbury is one of the most celebrated 20th-century writers.
Thanks for watching and don't forget to check out my books below if you're a fan of sci-fi and want to support the channel.
#sciencefiction #raybradbury #scifi
Books mentioned:
The Martian Chronicles
The Illustrated Man
The Golden Apples of the Sun
Fahrenheit 451
The October Country
Dandelion Wine
A Medicine for Melancholy
Something Wicked This Way Comes.
____________________________________________________________________
MY STUFF
linktr.ee/book...
____________________________________________________________________
vvv MORE vvv
MY SCI-FI NOVELS
www.amazon.co....
DELPHINE DESCENDS
After her family is killed and her homeworld occupied, young Kathreen Martin is sent to the distant world of Furoris for re-education. She will live the rest of her life as a serf - to be bought and sold as a commodity of the Imperial Network.
When her only chance of escape is ruined, a chance mistaken identity offers her a new life as the orphaned daughter of a First-Citizen Senator and heiress to a vast fortune.
She vows to claw her way into power to sit among the worlds’ elite. Then, with her own hands, she will reap bloody vengeance on them all.
But to beat them, she must play their game. And she must play it better than them all.
BLACK MILK
Prometheus has the chance to bring his wife back from the dead, but doing so will mean the destruction of Earth.
Spanning time, planets and dimensions, Black Milk draws to a climactic point in a post-apocalyptic future, where humanity, stranded with no planet to call home, fights to survive against a post-human digital entity that pursues them through the depths of space.
Five lives separated by aeons are inextricably linked by Prometheus’s actions:
Ystil.3 is an AI unit sent back in time from the distant future to investigate Prometheus’s discovery...
The mysterious Lydia has devoted her life to finding a planet that the last remaining humans can call home…
Tom Jones (he’s a HUGE fan!) is an AI trapped inside a digital subspace, lost and desperate to find his way back to his beloved in real-time…
Dr Norma Stanwyck is a neuroscientist from 24th Century Earth whose personal choices ripple throughout time...
Prometheus must learn the necessity of death or the entire universe will be swallowed by his grief.
____________________________________________________________________
GOODREADS
You can stalk me on Goodreads to see what I'm currently reading. bit.ly/3rrcByD
____________________________________________________________________
IMAGE USE
The images in my videos are mostly licensed stock photos. However, occasionally I will use images found online. I always seek to properly credit artists and offer a link back to their amazing work but sometimes it's hard to find the original source of the work. If I've used an image you own and I haven't credited you, please feel free to get in touch as I am always more than happy to do so.

Пікірлер: 25
@Sci-FiOdyssey
@Sci-FiOdyssey Жыл бұрын
"You don’t have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them." - RB
@christopherstephenjenksbsg4944
@christopherstephenjenksbsg4944 Жыл бұрын
Ray Bradbury was a terrific writer with an amazing imagination. I've known many of his stories since I was a kid, and the images of the boats on the canals of Mars or the torrential rain on Venus still live in my imagination with surprising power. I discovered Ray Bradbury as a kid in 1966, when I first read "The Martian Chronicles", and I've loved his work ever since. I *so* wanted to see the Martians from the book wandering around on Mars when Viking 1 landed in 1976, even though I knew better by that point. Among my favorite short stories by him are "The Long Rain" and "I Sing the Body Electric."
@IRosamelia
@IRosamelia Жыл бұрын
Fahrenheit 451 was one of the first books I ever read at school. I remember being absolutely flabberghasted by the idea of reading being prohibited, given most kids had to be forced into it. 🤔
@MagusMarquillin
@MagusMarquillin Жыл бұрын
I've read "Something Wicked" and half of "Illustraded Man", and he's quickly risen as someone I'll read as much of their work as I can. Not every short story is perfect, but their all entertaining and posit something interesting. I really fell in love with "Something Wicked" though; there's a fluid poetry and abundance of metaphor to his prose I can only so far equate to to Ursula Le Guin, though there's differences I want to nail down (I think she's slightly better at keeping me enraptured - without pausing to wonder what that means.) I really need to read more of both. Thanks for including that childhood story of "Mr. Electro" at the carnival granting him immortality, because that's literally a large part of what the book is about, so it's cool to learn that.
@peterschaffter826
@peterschaffter826 Жыл бұрын
My love affair with sci-fi began in the '60s when I was in grade 5. The school librarian handed me Bradbury's collection of short stories _S is for Space_ with the simple words, "Here, I think you'll like this." Two stories in, I felt as if my whole life had changed. For the next twenty years, I read nothing but sci-fi.
@ericcasagrande
@ericcasagrande 2 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. He is my fave author of all-time! Just subbed your channel.
@jasperdoornbos8989
@jasperdoornbos8989 Жыл бұрын
This is a nice way to wake up on a Sunday morning 😀!
@Sci-FiOdyssey
@Sci-FiOdyssey Жыл бұрын
👍👍👍
@barryvercueil2346
@barryvercueil2346 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video. Thank you I feel so informed. I've only recently returned to Science fiction. Cheers
@Sci-FiOdyssey
@Sci-FiOdyssey Жыл бұрын
Thanks! And welcome back to SF. You're in for a great ride.
@feralbluee
@feralbluee 2 ай бұрын
i love Bradbury. The Illustrated Man, Fahrenheit 451, and the Halloween Tree are among my favorites. and Buster Crabbe’s Flash Gordon will always live in my mind - one of my favorites ( via television. it’s very vivid in my mind. i still remember the the music of the clay people :) 🚀👾
@martinneumeyer9282
@martinneumeyer9282 2 ай бұрын
'Prey World' by A. Merow is also a great dystopian series from Germany. You should know it
@martinXY
@martinXY Жыл бұрын
Martin Prince: "As your president, I would demand a science-fiction library, featuring an ABC of the genre. Asimov, Bester, Clarke. Student: What about Ray Bradbury? Martin Prince: I'm aware of his work..." I always why Martin Prince was dismissive of Ray Bradbury's science fiction, but it seems Bradbury didn't consider himself a SF writer.
@major_west
@major_west Жыл бұрын
Another great video! Have to admit I've not read any of Bradbury's books. Going to correct this soon with the Martian Chronicles.
@noway9081
@noway9081 Жыл бұрын
My favorite story by Ray Bradbury is Way in the Middle of the Air, one of the stories that was included in the first publication of The Martan Chronicles. Basically, it was a story about African Americans leaving Earth for Mars due to segregation and Jim Crow laws. I love this story not just because of its content but also because of what it says about the limits of even the most creative and imaginative people. For all his creativity and imagination, when he wrote this story, Ray Bradbury was still a man living in the 1940s United States. So he could imagine a future where people can travel to Mars, but could not imagine a future where segregation and Jim Crow had been abolished. Sitting in the United States during the 1940s, Ray Bradbury, the futurist who invisioned space travel and entirely new universes, could not believe that the end of segregation was possible enough to even include it in a science fiction story. I am definitely not saying that I think Bradbury was racist. Far from it. Way in the Middle of the Air is definitely an anti-racist story. But the fact that even someone as incredibly creative as Bradbury was imaginatively limited by the society and times he lived in says a lot about how deeply our expectations and imagination are molded by our society and times. In the 1940s United States, a young incredibly talented science fiction writer could look around and see enough to believe in the possibility of future space travel and colonizing mars But living in that time and place, that same person could not see the possibility of an end to segregation and Jim Crow. All of us, the futurists, the visionaries, even the most wildly creative geniuses, are limited in our imaginations of the future by what we are told by the world around us. Had Bradbury not been othwise so profoundly limitless in his imagination, what I learned from Way in the Middle of the Air about the limits of our imagination would not have rung so true.
@emmanuelboakye1124
@emmanuelboakye1124 Жыл бұрын
Great video👍
@Sci-FiOdyssey
@Sci-FiOdyssey Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed
@loutowers6529
@loutowers6529 Жыл бұрын
“There are worse crimes than burning books. One of them is not reading them.” ― Joseph Brodsky
@bojovic78
@bojovic78 Жыл бұрын
I'm not a fan of Bradbury, but the channel is probably the best on SF literature, so I see it anyway.
@Pandoroxify
@Pandoroxify 6 ай бұрын
Will we get one of these on Frank Herbert?
@fredkelly6953
@fredkelly6953 Жыл бұрын
As Martin said "I'm aware of his work". Never considered him a real sci-fi author.
@IRosamelia
@IRosamelia Жыл бұрын
I thought you have said, "as a martian, I'm aware of his work" 👽
@HorribleHomeVideo
@HorribleHomeVideo 19 күн бұрын
was*
An Evening with Ray Bradbury 2001
54:36
University of California Television (UCTV)
Рет қаралды 329 М.
A Conversation with Ray Bradbury
8:00
TheRedCarChannel
Рет қаралды 325 М.
Новый уровень твоей сосиски
00:33
Кушать Хочу
Рет қаралды 4,6 МЛН
АЗАРТНИК 4 |СЕЗОН 2 Серия
31:45
Inter Production
Рет қаралды 1,1 МЛН
What are The Flood? (Doctor Who's Biggest Unsolved Mystery)
11:54
The 15 Best Sci-Fi Books I've Ever Read [Updated]
35:58
Bookpilled
Рет қаралды 1 МЛН
Ray Bradbury
12:28
Make your day!
Рет қаралды 820
Who is Robert A Heinlein?
7:35
Sci-Fi Odyssey
Рет қаралды 29 М.
Top 10 Ray Bradbury Short Stories (Ranked & Reviewed)
19:28
Benjamin McEvoy
Рет қаралды 13 М.
Hyperion: Great Sci-Fi Books Explained
29:47
Sci-Fi Odyssey
Рет қаралды 47 М.
Isaac Asimov talks about SF and it's re-birth since 1938
28:20
mrnobodysprincess
Рет қаралды 55 М.
The Pedestrian - Ray Bradbury
12:34
Justin James
Рет қаралды 299 М.
Day at Night: Ray Bradbury
29:05
CUNY TV
Рет қаралды 222 М.
Новый уровень твоей сосиски
00:33
Кушать Хочу
Рет қаралды 4,6 МЛН