As a member of the countries of the first world, even if we are walking together on the earth, we quickly point out the disadvantages and pitfalls of the poor society and use the society like the landscape You can not. In "the sun and the shadow", Ray Bradbury manipulated Ricardo and communicated readers with the rudeness of outsiders and the reaction of Ricardo and his colleagues. When a photographer took a picture with the possession of Ricardo, Ricardo was dissatisfied with his presence and told him to get angry and leave.
I worked in Bradbury for 12 years as his authoritative biographer. I wrote two books in the process. Bradbury Chronicles: listen to Ray Bradbury 's life and reactions: an interview with Ray Bradbury. Last summer I co-edited Shadow Show with Mott Castle. It is to celebrate the new story of Ray Bradbury. I spent hundreds of hours talking to this guy. In many cases, we talked at home for hours. I went on a journey of countless days through Los Angeles and walked along his memory. Bradbury grew up near Hollywood in the Golden Age and likes to relive memories with me. We detail books, reading, and his love for the library.
Ray Bradbury was born in Waukegan, Illinois in 1920. He is the third son of Leonard Spaulding Bradbury and Esther Marie Moberg Bradbury. In the autumn of 1926, the family of Ray Bradbury moved from Waukeen, Illinois, to Tucson, Arizona but returned to Waukegan in May 1927. By 1931 he began writing his own story on a butcher's paper. In 1932, after his father left the phone, the Bradbury family moved to Tucson and later returned to Waukegan. In 1934, the Bradbury family moved to Los Angeles, California. Bradbury graduated from Los Angeles High School in 1938. His formal education ended there, but he pushed himself further in the library at night with his typewriter at night.
Ray Bradbury lives on the hill behind the Palm Park. When the funds of the Los Angeles County Library were almost out, he donated quite consistent and important information to the Palms-Rancho Park Library. He also has a cellar full of dinosaur toys. I think these facts are equally important. One of the family put him in front of the microphone while he left the wheelchair and pushed him in the middle for several years. He talked about life in a few hours. As he grew up how he grew up during the Great Depression, which he was unable to pay for college tuition, he read as much as possible. He taught me how he wrote Fahrenheit 451 to the rental typewriter in the UCLA library underground and how he quickly typed as he bought 10 cents in 30 minutes of use. He told us that his favorite story is to fight the policeman as a young man eats biscuits in the street.