RAY BRADBURY'S CENTENNIAL

2020 marks the centennial of the great Ray Bradbury! Ray always told me he wanted to live to 100. And we can help him do this by keeping the man and his work very much alive in the hearts and minds of future generations!

The Man Behind the Masterpieces

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Here I discuss the life of Ray Bradbury and my very close and dear relationship with him. You will learn about Ray Bradbury’s ascension from Midwestern obscurity to becoming a bonafide global icon. You will learn the origins of Fahrenheit 451, its importance in our present-day political landscape, and why I maintain that Bradbury did more to shape culture than any other 20th Century writer.

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The Secret History of Fahrenheit 451

Learn the fascinating story behind the creation of one of the masterworks of dystopian literature and the man who created it.



WICHITA IN OCTOBER

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In early October, I delivered the keynote address at the Kansas Association of the Teachers of English Conference. I have been outspoken about the relatively recent willful political attempt to strip-mine public schools and public libraries of funding in order to cultivate an uniformed constituency (see this Chicago Tribune article).

Here’s the damn deal: censorship is going on right this very minute, right before our very eyes. It’s not happening vis-à-vis high-profile, ALA banned book lists or Hitlerean book burnings. Nope. That’s all way too obvious. Censorship is occurring in a much more inky and clandestine fashion, it is a creeping shadow that deemphasizes books, the word and the teachers who celebrate these monuments to power, knowledge and speech.

So I went to Wichita in October. And I knew right off that I was with my people. And I told them this. YOU ARE MY PEOPLE.

I often speak at comic book conventions and literary festivals to an assorted mélange of cosplay geeks, word-nerds, book-worms, collectors, furries, four-color weirdos and assorted genre freaks. -I get these pop-cultural urchins. I am one of them. But at the KATE conference, I was truly with my people. English teachers are the trench warriors on the front lines of education, facing the Trumpian mustard gases of fetid disinformation. Teachers yearn for an informed society.

NEW SHORT STORY

I had a new short story published in Arcturus magazine a few months back and forgot to mention it here. This story will likely be in my forthcoming collection. At present there are 16 stories in this book, five of them are all-new, never before published. A couple are super-rare and ran in low-circulation print literary journals. Hopefully I'll have this all wrapped up by the end of this summer.

LISTEN TO THE ECHOES 2.0

And here it is! The cover to the new, updated, art-book edition of LISTEN TO THE ECHOES: THE RAY BRADBURY INTERVIEWS. Available in late-November.

•Color photos throughout—many never before seen or published.

•A new introduction by Sam Weller.

•New afterwards by legendary writer Margaret Atwood and director/writer Frank Darabont.

•A new chapter of "outtake" interviews between biographer Sam Weller and Ray Bradbury.

Lots more details will be announced right here. Stay tuned. This book is going to be a real treat for fans.

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CITY OF ANGELS

This past May, I joined my old friend David Kipen, former Literary Director of the National Endowment for the Arts, for a discussion on Ray Bradbury and urbanism. This event was sponsored by the Los Angeles Office of Cultural Affairs and the NEA's "Big Read" initiative. Over the years, I have given many hundreds of presentations around the world, but this one was quite singular. The event was held at Clifton's Cafeteria in downtown Los Angeles. As a teenager, Ray Bradbury attended meetings of the Los Angeles Science Fiction League at Clifton's alongside other fledgling creatives such as Ray Harryhausen, Leigh Brackett, Edward Hamilton and Robert Heinlein and his wife Leslyn. The group would meet each week in "The Little Brown Room" to read each other's stories, commune, and talk about the future. It was an absolute thrill to speak with David about Ray Bradbury's visions for Los Angeles, mass transit, and urban planning. We were joined by several guests, including his dear friend Sid Stebel, who first met Ray in the late 1940s.

The event was marvelous. There was a great crowd with a ton of old friends. David Kipen is the consummate Master of Ceremonies. It was truly an honor to gather and pay our respects to Ray in the very spot he used to go to as a young man, the place where he dreamed of his future as a writer and then went to make that future a reality.

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