Dark Carnival
by
Ray Bradbury
Over 50 years out of print the October release of DARK CARNIVAL by RAY BRADBURY will be the literary event of the year for Bradbury fans. After many years Ray Bradbury has agreed to allow this classic to be published in a LIMITED edition, with bonus material, edited by his long-time bibliographer Donn Albright. With the space allowed here we can't provide details of ALL th...more
Hardcover, 479 pages
Published
by Gauntlet Press
(first published 1947)
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Over 50 years out of print the October release of DARK CARNIVAL by RAY BRADBURY will be the literary event of the year for Bradbury fans. After many years Ray Bradbury has agreed to allow this classic to be published in a LIMITED edition, with bonus material, edited by his long-time bibliographer Donn Albright. With the space allowed here we can't provide details of ALL the bonus material, but for complete details check out the Gauntlet Press website. The cover art is a Bradbury oil painting fr
I only really knew Ray Bradbury's sci-fi and speculative fiction stuff before, but decided to get this when he died. I don't know what I was expecting exactly, but this is crazy dark shit! I had no idea he was so morbid and, at times, funny. A few of the stories feature the same monster family, but other than those, no story in here really resembles any other story, as far as plot goes. There are a few writers who seem to have a gift of endless ideas spurting out of their heads, and Bradbury's d...more
This collection of early "weird" short stories was interesting - not all are great but there are a few standouts. All in one book, the quality is uneven but it would have been so cool to come across one of these dark stories in Mademoiselle magazine in, say, 1945.
The Smiling People: Creepy story with the ending you were dreading.
The Emissary - okay this story scared me - I did do a running jump on to my bed in the dark after reading in order to avoid whatever was underneath. Yes I am 40 years ol...more
The Smiling People: Creepy story with the ending you were dreading.
The Emissary - okay this story scared me - I did do a running jump on to my bed in the dark after reading in order to avoid whatever was underneath. Yes I am 40 years ol...more
This is a welcome edition (caveats below), with B/W thumbnail reproductions of the covers for the magazines in which the stories first appeared, informative introductions, a few extra stories written at the same time, reproductions of some of Bradbury's typed manuscripts, etc. It should also be noted that some of the stories, notably "The Emissary" appear in simpler versions, which vary markedly from the versions reprinted in OCTOBER COUNTRY.
The book is expensive, and it is a pity that after ex...more
The book is expensive, and it is a pity that after ex...more
Nov 13, 2011
Debra
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
sai-king-recommends,
horror-supernatural
Stephen King recommended author and book. In 1981's Danse Macabre, King dedicated his book as follows: "It's easy enough - perhaps too easy - to memorialize the dead. This book is for the six great writers of the macabre who are still alive." The six listed were Robert Bloch, Jorge Luis Borges, Ray Bradbury, Frank Belknap Long, Donald Wandrei, Manly Wade Wellman.
Book favorably mentioned in Chapter 2 of Berkley's 1983 paperback edition of Danse Macabre.
Book favorably mentioned in Chapter 2 of Berkley's 1983 paperback edition of Danse Macabre.
Bradbury's first book has 27 stories in the horror vein, some of which seem tailor-made for the EC comics that came along a few years later. A few qualify as juvenilia, some are interesting-to-good and a few are creepily brilliant, especially Homecoming, Skeleton and The Small Assassin. I wondered for years what this book was like. For all but the diehards, The October Country (in which the best are reprinted) will suffice.
May 25, 2013
Joner
marked it as to-read
Apr 28, 2013
Kathy
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
sci-fi-fantasy-horror,
short-stories
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American novelist, short story writer, essayist, playwright, screenwriter and poet, was born August 22, 1920 in Waukegan, Illinois. He graduated from a Los Angeles high school in 1938. Although his formal education ended there, he became a "student of life," selling newspapers on L.A. street corners from 1938 to 1942, spending his nights in the public library and his days at the typewriter. He bec...more
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