Sundays with Ray Bradbury
“I can imagine all kinds of worlds and places, but I cannot imagine a world without Bradbury.” — Neil Gaiman
“I can imagine all kinds of worlds and places, but I cannot imagine a world without Bradbury.” — Neil Gaiman
Ray Bradbury (1920–2012) had a remarkable writing career. Author and screenwriter, here is a partial list of his writing projects:
Novels
- 1950 The Martian Chronicles
- 1953 Fahrenheit 451
- 1957 Dandelion Wine
- 1962 Something Wicked This Way Comes
- 1972 The Halloween Tree
- 1985 Death Is a Lonely Business
- 1990 A Graveyard for Lunatics
- 1992 Green Shadows, White Whale
- 2001 From the Dust Returned
- 2003 Let’s All Kill Constance
- 2006 Farewell Summer
Collections
- 1947 Dark Carnival
- 1951 The Illustrated Man
- 1953 The Golden Apples of the Sun
- 1955 The October Country
- 1959 A Medicine for Melancholy
- 1959 The Day It Rained Forever
- 1962 The Small Assassin
- 1964 The Machineries of Joy
- 1965 The Vintage Bradbury
- 1966 Twice 22
- 1969 I Sing The Body Electric!
- 1975 Ray Bradbury
- 1976 Long After Midnight
- 1980 The Last Circus and the Electrocution
- 1980 The Stories of Ray Bradbury
- 1983 Dinosaur Tales
- 1984 A Memory of Murder
- 1988 The Toynbee Convector
- 1990 Classic Stories 1
- 1990 Classic Stories 2
- 1996 Quicker Than The Eye
- 1997 Driving Blind
- 1997 The Golden Apples of the Sun and Other Stories
- 1998 A Medicine For Melancholy And Other Stories
- 1998 I Sing The Body Electric! And Other Stories
- 2002 One More for the Road
- 2003 Bradbury Stories
- 2004 The Cat’s Pajamas: Stories
- 2005 A Sound of Thunder and Other Stories
- 2007 Now and Forever: Somewhere a Band is Playing & Leviathan ’99
- 2007 Summer Morning, Summer Night
- 2009 We’ll Always Have Paris: Stories
- 2010 A Pleasure To Burn
There are a couple of Bradbury quotes I want to include in my book The Protagonist’s Journey: Character Driven Screenwriting and Storytelling:
“Plot is no more than footprints left in the snow after your characters have run by on their way to incredible destinations.”
“Stand aside, forget targets, let the characters, your fingers, body, blood, and heart do.”
You can see why I like those quotes!
Like many Bradbury observations, they float around online without attribution to the original source. Therefore, I recently picked up Zen in the Art of Writing written by Bradbury and am reading through it to see if I can find those two observations on the craft..
As I began with the book, it occurred to me: Why not share Bradbury’s wisdom with Go Into The Story readers? Hence, a new series: Sundays with Ray Bradbury. Today: From Zen in the Art of Writing , “How to Keep and Feed a Muse,” pp. 22–23, 25.
It is my contention that in order to Keep a Muse, you must first offer food. How you can feed something that isn't yet there is a little hard to explain. But we live surrounded by paradoxes. One more shouldn't hurt us.
The fact is simple enough. Through a lifetime, by ingesting food and water, we build cells, we grow, we become larger and more substantial. That which was not, is. The process is undetectable. It can be viewed only at intervals along the way. We know it is happening, but we don't know quite how or why.
Similarly, in a lifetime, we stuff ourselves with sounds, sights, smells, tastes, and textures of people, landscapes, events, large and small. We stuff ourselves with these impressions and experiences and our reaction to them. Into our subconscious go not only factual data but reactive data, our movement toward or away from the sensed events.
These are the stuffs, the foods, on which The Muse grows. This is the storehouse, the file, to which we must return every waking hour to check reality against memory, and in sleep to check memory against memory, which means ghost against ghost, in order to exorcise them, if necessary.
— —
When people ask me where I get my ideas, I laugh. How strange — we are so busy looking out, to find ways and means, we forget to look in.
Takeaway: Reading these words made me think that my blog’s name Go Into The Story might just as well be Go Into The Self. Because what Bradbury suggests here is the source of stories is the Self. So often, we go in search of the Muse when the Muse lies within, lurking in our subconscious, trawling through our remembered experiences and associated feelings.
This is not to say stories need necessarily derive from our specific life events, although they can certainly do that. Rather, whatever story springs to mind or for which we are hired to write, we can journey within to tap into emotions from moments in our past to fuel the psychological lives of our characters.
As Joseph Campbell says of the hero’s journey, “The outward journey is really an inward journey.
To learn more about Ray Bradbury, check out this website: raybradbury.com.
For previous Sundays with Ray Bradbury articles, go here.