Obit: Author Ray Bradbury Dead at 91

A few writers helped drag science fiction and fantasy out of the literary dungeon of the lurid ’30s and ’40s pulp magazines and paperbacks by their polished style, interesting characters and complex plots. Kurt Vonnegut, Arthur C. Clarke, Philip K. Dick, Isaac Asimov, Pohl Anderson, Robert Heinlein, Frank Herbert, Fredric Brown, A.E. Van Vogt, et al, were among that group of artists, as was Ray Bradbury. The well-written stories of Bradbury didn’t just entertain, they did that which the greatest literature is supposed to do: they made you think. He once wrote: “Everyone must leave something behind when he dies, my grandfather said. A child or a book or a painting or a house or a wall built or a pair of shoes made. Or a garden planted. Something your hand touched some way so your soul has somewhere to go when you die, and when people look at that tree or that flower you planted, you’re there.” RIP, Ray Bradbury, you’ll always be there with us. Here’s an obit from Yahoo News with links to other info.

Ray Bradbury, beloved science fiction author, dies

The Lookout
Yahoo.com
Wed, 6th Jun 2012 02:41 PM

Ray Bradbury, author of “Fahrenheit 451,” “The Martian Chronicles” and other iconic science fiction novels, died Tuesday night at the age of 91, according to The Associated Press.

“His legacy lives on in his monumental body of books, film, television and theater, but more importantly, in the minds and hearts of anyone who read him, because to read him was to know him. He was the biggest kid I know,” his grandson told the i09 science fiction blog.

Bradbury sold 8 million copies of his books in 36 languages, according to The New York Times’ obit.

He attributed his success as a writer to never having gone to college—instead, he read and wrote voraciously. “When I graduated from high school in 1938, I began going to the library three nights a week,” he said in an interview with The Paris Review. “I did this every week for almost ten years and finally, in 1947, around the time I got married, I figured I was done. So I graduated from the library when I was twenty-seven. I discovered that the library is the real school.”

“The universe is a little emptier right now,” Texas A&M University-Commerce English professor Robin Anne Reid told Yahoo News. She wrote a book about Bradbury’s works and sits on the board of the Center for Ray Bradbury Studies. “There’s less of that sense of joy and exultation that he was writing in his works all the way to the end.”

Reid said Bradbury was the first writer to jump from pulp magazines to mainstream literary magazines, thus bringing science fiction writing into the mainstream. Bradbury also wrote fantasy and horror.

Read the rest here.

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Today’s Quotes: From Ray Bradbury

[Last quote from “The Martian Chronicles”]

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Today’s Music: Ton Van Bergeyk, “Blind Blake’s Breakdown”

No birthdays today. Ton Van Bergeyk is a great interpreter of old blues tunes, and here’s a good example:

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Six Facts Wisconsin Recall Voters Need to Know

Please pass this along to any Wisconsin voters you happen to know — soon.

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On Wisconsin: Vote Out Scott Walker and the Koch Bros.

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Today’s Quotes: Conservatives Without Conscience

“In my book Conservatives Without Conscience, I set forth the traits of authoritarian leaders and followers, which have been distilled from a half-century of empirical research, during which thousands of people have voluntarily been interviewed by social scientists. …
“[Authoritarian] leaders possess most, if not all, of these traits:

* dominating

* opposes equality

* desirous of personal power

* amoral

* intimidating and bullying

* faintly hedonistic

* vengeful

* pitiless

* exploitive

* manipulative

* dishonest

* cheats to win

* highly prejudiced (racist, sexist, homophobic)

* mean-spirited

* militant

* nationalistic

* tells others what they want to hear

* takes advantage of “suckers”

* specializes in creating false images to sell self

* may or may not be religious

* usually politically and economically conservative/Republican”
— John Dean, excerpted from the Urantian Sojourn blog.

“I am convinced that at least a third of the population is what Eric Hoffer calls ‘true believers.’ They are joiners and followers . . . ‘people who want to give away their power. They look for answers, meaning, and enlightenment outside themselves. ….They are followers, not because of a desire for self-advancement, but because it can satisfy their passion for self-renunciation.’ Hoffer also says that true believers ‘are eternally incomplete and eternally insecure.’ ……The Moral Majority is made up of true believers. All cults are composed of true believers. You’ll find them in politics, churches, businesses, and social cause groups. They are the fanatics in these organizations.”
Dick Sutphen, “The Battle for Your Mind: Brainwashing Techniques Being Used On The Public

“The men the American people admire most extravagantly are the most daring liars; the men they detest most violently are those who try to tell them the truth.”
– H. L. Mencken

“They must find it difficult…those who have taken authority as the truth, rather than truth as the authority.”
— Gerald Massey

“But while national prominence and connections have helped Walker’s bottom line, a series of local scandals threatens to add to the recall momentum. A ‘John Doe’ investigation into improprieties when Walker was county executive is still being conducted, and six onetime Walker aides have been confronted with criminal charges and 13 individuals granted immunity. The public charges range from evidence that a separate wireless email router was installed in the county executive office to allow campaign-related business and fundraising to be conducted on government time to the far more serious and salacious charge that onetime Walker deputy chief of staff and economic development director Tim Russell embezzled more than $60,000 from a veterans charity.
“To date, Walker has transferred $100,000 from campaign funds into legal defense funds. The ongoing nature of this investigation could continue to dog Walker and his allies even if he passes the recall text on Tuesday. Wisconsin Republican politics is a small world, and indictments could affect local figures well known to the Badger State crew running the RNC. This is the considerable downside that comes when local politics reaches the national level.”
— John Avlon, “The Wisconsinites Running the RNC Double Down on Walker Recall Fight,” The Daily Beast, June 3, 2012.

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Cartoons: My Take on Scott Walker and the Koch Bros.

Random cartoon collages by yours truly from 2011 and 2012:

Continue reading

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Today’s Music: Freddie Stone of Sly and the Family Stone

Freddie Stone, guitarist for Sly and the Family Stone, was born this day in 1946. Listen up, ’cause it gets funky, everyday people.

Bonus video: “Dance to the Music” (live in 1969):

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The Koch Bros. Puppet Show

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Today’s (Lengthy) Quote: Charles P. Pierce on the Scott Walker Recall

This country’s best and funniest political journalist, Charles P. Pierce, currently camped out in Wisconsin for Scott Walker’s recall, renders a brief analysis of the situation on the ground there in the excerpt below:

“If there’s any prominent recollection among the people who have fought this from the beginning, it’s that Walker blindsided everyone when he dropped what he called ‘the bomb’ on the state as regards the rights of public employees to bargain collectively. Out on the veranda, with the swallows darting along the grass at the top of the bluffs, Assemblyman Peter Barca, who became a YouTube sensation in March 2011 when he accused the Republican majority of breaking the state’s open-meetings law in its haste to pass Walker’s union-stripping bill. Barca recalls vividly how gobsmacked he and all the other Democrats were when Walker’s real plans were revealed.

“‘He didn’t run on this. He never said he was going to do this’ Barca says. ‘As a Democratic leader in the Assembly, I met with the governor. He said he’d like to meet with us every week. We knew something was up. I heard from someone from one of the business groups, and he said, ‘Hey, I’m picking up that the governor’s really going to do something huge tomorrow that’s going to affect collective bargaining in Wisconsin.’ I said, ‘Like what?’ ‘He called last night and said the governor had met with some business groups and he told them that he was going to basically end collective bargaining.’

“‘Next day, we walked in about nine o’clock. My first word on this was, ‘Governor, you didn’t run on this. Why would you do something like this? I’ll tell you right now, this is going to be met with massive resistance.’ Now, never in my wildest dreams did I think it would be this kind of massive resistance. This was like the civil rights movement or the antiwar days, and people who’d served back then said this was even larger than that. I think there’s been a re-emergence of people who care about Wisconsin values.'”

“But it still doesn’t feel like that anymore. It feels tamed and broken and fit for a conventional bridle. After I was asked to leave, I wandered out to the edge of the road where a man named Craig, who’s been at this since the chilly spring of 2011, was standing there holding a sign he’d made when he was marching around the capitol. It had on it Dr. King’s famous prophecy about the arc of history bending toward justice. On the other side of it was a placard promoting Tom Barrett for governor.

“‘It’s not like it was,’ Craig said to me. ‘Back then, when we were walking, it felt like we were blessed or something. Now, it’s hard work to get this done.’ Somebody drove by and honked their horn. Craig waved. A movement has been channelled into a campaign, and campaigns die in the summer on days like this one, with the big lake all peaceful and blue, and the gulls circling the bluffs, and the yachts gently tacking away from the shore. Movements need cold winds and lowering skies. They need something to lean against, to push back on, to oppose.”
— Charles P. Pierce, “In Wisconsin, a Recall Movement Becomes a Campaign, and Nobody’s Sure How to Be Blind-Sided Anymore,” Esquire, June 4, 2012.

 

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