Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Bradbury, Ray (Vol. 29) - Robert Plank (essay date 1981)
Bradbury, Ray (Vol. 29) - Robert Plank (essay date 1981)
Robert Plank (essay date 1981)
SOURCE: "The Expedition of the Planet of Paranoia," in Extrapolation, Vol. 22, No. 2, 1981, pp. 171-85.
[In this excerpted essay, Plank offers a variety of interpretations of Bradbury's "April 2000: The Third Expedition," lending insight into other stories collected in The Martian Chronicles.]
Ray Bradbury's most famous book is not a book; The Martian Chronicles (1950) are chronicles in outward appearance only. Rather they are individual stories strung on a chronological line, glued together here and there with smudges of connective tissue. They were clearly written independently, and many of them were originally published separately. The book purports to relate events that took place between January 1999 and October 2026, but many of them could have taken place—as far as they could have taken place at all—at different times and in a different sequence. This is particularly true of the...
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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)
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- 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)
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