The Mystery, Crime, and Thriller Group discussion
Historical Group Reads
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Sept/Oct 2010: Something Wicked This Way Comes - Ray Bradbury
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I'm not great with the names of the short stories, as you can tell, but usually recognize the themes. That said, I used 'The Google on The Internet Machine' (lol) and don't recall reading a theme like an everlasting boy who goes from family to family ... aka "Hail and Farewell."
"Sound of Thunder" ... yes, that's the dinosaur hunting one for sure. Excellent story. One of my all time favorites.
Was "The Playground" the story of the kids and their digital playground where things can get dangerous? I like that one too for the callousness of children it conveyed. Not that all kids are that way, of course.

I think I'm going to read King's The Dark Half now that I'm in the mood to be terrified and disturbed :D
Thank you, Barry, for the excellent choice!

My book finally arrived! Yay!! Will start this evening.
Wow! What a great first chapter. Filled with foreboding and mystery. Love Bradbury's use of language and rhythm.
I'm going to wait a while before I read the comments above as I don't want to find a spoiler by accident.
I'm so glad to be reading this finally. I have been wanting to for centuries. Thanks Barry :-)
I'm going to wait a while before I read the comments above as I don't want to find a spoiler by accident.
I'm so glad to be reading this finally. I have been wanting to for centuries. Thanks Barry :-)


Susanne wrote: "I have collected my copy from the library a couple of days ago and, to be honest, I am having a difficult time to 'get into' the story. I find Bradbury's writing style somewhat distracting from th..."
I'm having the same problem, Susanne and Barry :-( but I know it has to do with my difficulties with stream of consciousness type writing. The first pages were great, but it's making me very tired and confused trying to keep the plot separate from the emotions. I know that's the point, that they should be totally mixed together, but I'm having a tough time with it.
I'm having the same problem, Susanne and Barry :-( but I know it has to do with my difficulties with stream of consciousness type writing. The first pages were great, but it's making me very tired and confused trying to keep the plot separate from the emotions. I know that's the point, that they should be totally mixed together, but I'm having a tough time with it.

I have thoroughly enjoyed reading it with you all and reading your posts!!!

Compare this to Farenheit 451 where the main character is a no-nonsense kind of guy, if I recall correctly, and the society around him is stripped-down and uninviting.
Also differs from the aforementioned Sound of Thunder.
It is interesting, but I do get a little judgemental on phrases like "Oh, gosh!" coming from a teenaged boy but it was perhaps a different time when Bradbury wrote it.

Reading it at first was a little difficult, but I found that by not dwelling on the more verbose parts, I was still able experience the richly textured atmosphere he created. Some phrases, however, were definitely worth reading more than once. It didn't seem like stream of consciousness as much as bursts of descriptive flavor. (OK, that sounds corny, but I can't think of how else to describe it.)
Haven't seen the movie, but with Halloween coming up, I'll have to find it!


For now, I'm going to read some of his stories.

I'm going back to re-read the comments on this thread. So many interesting thoughts and comments that I want to digest. Thanks for the thought provoking read and discussion!

I just finished reading Something Wicked. I finished it in 3 days, and I enjoyed the story. I did have some issues with the overly descriptive phrases at times, and at other times they seemed to add a great deal to the story.
Mr. Halloway is referred to being an "old, old man", but he was only 54 as I remember. I think that this is more how HE feels, and this affects his relationship with Will. He doesn't see what he has to offer him. He talks about being too old to run around with him.
I thought Bradbury may have used the surname Halloway as a reference to "saint". I remembered my Catholic school days and looked up the history of Halloween:
"The celebration was also called All-hallows or All-hallowmas (from Middle English Alholowmesse meaning All Saints' Day) and the night before it, the night of Samhain, began to be called All-hallows Eve and, eventually, Halloween."
Mr. Halloway's actions in the story would make a case for the reference to All Hallows Eve or All Saints Eve. These actions change the way he feels about his age and his relationship with Will changes for the better as well.
I enjoyed that the way to fight this evil was to laugh and love. Did I miss what happened to Mrs. Foley?
Great choice of reading. I had never read this one, although I have read The Illustrated Man and Fahrenheit 451.
I was a huge Twilight Zone fan, and I enjoy all these stories for their strange twists and turns. I enjoy reading all your wonderful comments!


Cool insights, Barry. I'm a big fan of Rod Serling, Twilight Zone and Night Gallery.
Have you seen this interview of Rod by Mike Wallace way-back-when? It occurred right when Rod was just about to begin producing Twilight Zone.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77SEuy...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJSjso...

I didn't realize how much of a trailblazer he was in the world of television.



Rod was The Man, for sure. Did he ever write that novel? He surely didn't need it to exercise his creativity. Barry, you have an autograph? How much do you want for it? :^)
Carol lived near Rod? Very cool.
Looks like our man Bradbury wrote for Twilight Zone: "... aside from Serling himself, who crafted nearly two-thirds of the series' total episodes, writers for The Twilight Zone included leading genre authors such as Charles Beaumont, Richard Matheson, Jerry Sohl, George Clayton Johnson, Earl Hamner, Jr., Reginald Rose, Harlan Ellison and Ray Bradbury. " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Twil...
Suzanne -- this is a more difficult work of Bradbury's to Get Into, imo.

I went there already, Barry! Thanks. Loved the Twilight Zone!!!

"Miss Foley, where are you? Mr. Crosetti! It's over! Be still! Quiet! It's alright. Come back, Come back!
But the wind was blowing their footprints out of the grass and they might run forever now trying to outflee themselves."

"Miss Foley, where are you? Mr. Crosetti! It's over! Be still! Quiet! It's alright. Come back, Come back!
But the wind was bl..."
Thanks, Connie! I missed that and I was sure there was some resolution for poor Miss Foley.

Thank you, Barry, for choosing a book that so many people loved. And for being a great discussion leader with so much participation.
The conversation will remain open, so anyone who hasn't read it yet can join in at a later date.
ETA: Barry seems to have disappeared, taking his posts with him [image error], which means that the conversation is a little strange.
The conversation will remain open, so anyone who hasn't read it yet can join in at a later date.
ETA: Barry seems to have disappeared, taking his posts with him [image error], which means that the conversation is a little strange.

Strange.
Anyway, I am a slow reader of sorts. Not that slow when actually reading but limited in time with the job and writing et al. Just finished Something Wicked today and have mixed feelings. It was definitely the hardest story of Bradbury's for me to read, mostly because of the wild descriptions and almost stream of consciousness moments.
For me, this is a Young Adult book. Given the way the boys are portrayed. You'd think this was about the boys until 4/5 of the way through when morose Mr. Halloway becomes the focal point.
I didn't agree with the manner in which The Witch (two wh-itches!, pun alert) was
SPOILER ALERT
dispatched, as well as Mr. Dark, and how Will was resurrected. All that seemed too innocent but that was Bradbury's point, I suppose.

I'm not reading it constantly either.
How can he take his posts with him?
Jan C wrote: "How can he take his posts with him?"
When you delete your membership from the site you have the choice: you can leave your posts as they are, and there is "deleted member" instead of an avatar; or you can delete everything.
When you delete your membership from the site you have the choice: you can leave your posts as they are, and there is "deleted member" instead of an avatar; or you can delete everything.

Books mentioned in this topic
Stories from the Twilight Zone (other topics)More Stories from the Twilight Zone (other topics)
Dark Carnival (other topics)
Drood (other topics)
The Illustrated Man (other topics)
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