Book- The
Illustrated man
Author: Ray
Bradbury
Score: 8/10
Year:
1951. (reprint 2012)
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
ISBN : 978-1-4516-7818-5
280 pages
Language :
English.
A few years ago, I
had borrowed The Illustrated man at our local media library. I read it
entirely and loved it immensely.
Shortly thereafter, I found out that that
edition was abridged. It contained, if I recall well, 6 short stories, out of
the total 18.
As
a completist, I don't like abridged novels, not any more than having a
painting cut into pieces...
Therefore, I
ordered the proper, full version and I just finished reading it - which took me
some months, actually - because I was reading several other books, alternating
between subjects and genres.
My overall
impression is that it is less cohesive than Bradbury's Martian
chronicles.
Indeed, it looks
like a collection of short stories that didn't have enough in common to go into
a specific book, so these 18 stories were placed into one novel, between a
prologue and an epilogue, depicting the meeting between a narrator and the
illustrated man whose tattoos reshape themselves into various
people's stories - the short stories of the collection.
The narrator
observes the scenes that we read in these 18 different stories, set in various
time frames and places : mostly on Earth, sometimes somewhere in space, or on
Mars - much like the Martian Chronicles.
What binds these
short stories together is Ray's study of human nature and psyche. His study of
human behavior and history- the real one is transcribed into fictions
of past and future, or rather, possible future.
His vision, his
imagination is often gloomy, pessimistic possible future, because as you saw,
this book was published in 1951, shortly after WW2. It's impossible to imagine
a hugely positive future, without negative aspects, and indeed these short
stories depict both pessimistic, but also some more hopeful and
optimistic views - in a more or less balanced measure.
I have enjoyed
most of these stories, in varying degrees, but I wish that Ray had a more
poetic and fluid composition - his sentences are sometimes too long and too
winded. He uses long sentences with far too many commas, and that can be
distracting at moments.
I won’t go into
the details of each story in this first review. I’ll probably tell you about them
another time – or just let you discover for yourselves, or read many of the
more professional reviews available on the net.
In the meanwhile,
here’s the list of the original, unabridged (and un-altered) stories:
Prologue: The Illustrated Man
• The Veldt
• Kaleidoscope
• The Other Foot
• The Highway
• The Man
• The Long Rain
• The Rocket Man
• The Fire Balloons
• The Last Night of the World
• The Exiles
• No Particular Night or Morning
• The Fox and the Forest
• The Visitor
• The Concrete Mixer
• Marionettes, Inc.
• The City
• Zero Hour
• The Rocket
• Epilogue
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