Abstract William Halloway and James Nightshade are 13-year-old boy living in Green Town, Illinois. They will be fourteen in a week. A lightning rod salesman entered the town and warned the boys that a storm was coming. He put a gym on a roof of his roof with a lightning rod. The boys visited Will's father, Charles Harlow, at the library and took out several books. Charles Halloway felt he was very old, even though he was only 54 years old, and he ran tortured as a young man's impulse and ran like a boy It was. Charles Halloway and the boys learned about the carnival that begins the next day.
This wicked way comes from Ray Bradbury's 1962 Dark Fantasy. This is a 13-year-old good friend, Jim Knight Shad and William Harlow, and the experience of Carnival's nightmare in their mid-western town in October, and how boys fight fear. Carnival leader is a mysterious "Mr. Darkness" that seems to have the power to give secret desire to citizens. In fact, the darkness is a malicious existence, like carnival, living outside the vitality of the people they were enslaved. Will's father, Charles Hallway, was tired of his presence as he felt he was too old to be Will's father.
Such evil things can be interpreted as a fable of carnival in the fight between good and evil, will of moral, Jim and Charles, and dark and his sins and temptations. Like many other imaginary works surrounding the same concept, superiority is ultimately a victory with pure heart, not supernatural power or material force. Jim represents kindness and is always on the verge of temptation. And Will is part of refusing to make a concession despite his crisis and doubt.
The fantasy and horror elements blend perfectly and create a series of memorable events. An example of a dark fantasy, when something evil comes this way, Lei Bradbury's novel tells the story of two young boys, Jim and Will, who discovered the secret of a mysterious travel carnival. In this mysterious carnival there are lots of charm, such as a maze of bad mirrors and a carousel that changes times. - ... Many ancient beliefs from different cultures are characterized by people with wonderful creatures and places, and incredible magic. Gulliver's Travels was written by Jonathan Swift in 1726 and is considered one of the earliest SF fantasy novels. This is a story about a man who encountered a strange seemingly abnormal thing on the road. In the early nineteenth century, Frankenstein, a book by Mary Sherry's "Crazy Scientist" theme, released his experimental issues.