Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Bradbury, Ray (Vol. 29) - Damon Knight (essay date 1967)
Bradbury, Ray (Vol. 29) - Damon Knight (essay date 1967)
Damon Knight (essay date 1967)
SOURCE: "When I Was in Kneepants: Ray Bradbury," in In Search of Wonder: Essays on Modern Science Fiction, Advent Publishers, pp. 108-13.
[In the following essay, Knight presents a brief overview of Bradbury's early short fiction, noting that his principal subject is childhood.]
Ray Bradbury began writing professionally at the floodtide of the cerebral story in science fiction—in 1940, when John Campbell was revolutionizing the field with a new respect for facts, and a wholly justified contempt for the overblown emotional values of the thirties. Bradbury, who had nothing but emotion to offer, couldn't sell Campbell.
Bradbury didn't care. He adapted his work just enough to meet the standards of the lesser markets—he filled it with the secondhand furniture of contemporary science fiction and fantasy—and went on writing what he chose.
It's curious to look back now on those first Bradbury...
[The entire page is 2477 words long]
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- Introduction
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Criticism
- Christopher Isherwood (review date 1950)
- Gilbert Highet (essay date 1965)
- Damon Knight (essay date 1967)
- Russell Kirk (essay date 1969)
- Steven Dimeo (essay date 1972)
- Kent Forrester (essay date 1976)
- Willis E. McNelly (essay date 1976)
- A. James Stupple (essay date 1976)
- Wayne L. Johnson (essay date 1978)
- Thomas M. Disch (review date 1980)
- Orson Scott Card (review date 1980)
- Hazel Pierce (essay date 1980)
- Robert Plank (essay date 1981)
- Stephen King (essay date 1981)
- David Mogen (essay date 1986)
- Ray Bradbury (essay date 1987)
- William F. Touponce (essay date 1989)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
