Mars Chronicle Mars Chronicle, Ray Bloodberry is a science fiction novel written in 1946. The main work of this Bradberry is a collection of short stories about Mars and Martians. Bradbury clearly understands Mars in these stories. From the perspective of Martians, his vision is a fantasy world. In this work, humans from the earth are aliens from outer space. Bradbury has won numerous awards, including the O. Henry Memorial Award, Benjamin Franklin Award, Air Space Writers Association Award, Lifetime Achievement World Fantasy Award, American SF Novelist Master Award.
- Ray Bradbury's "Mars Chronicle" Martian Chronicle is written in 1999 instead of 50 years ago, many problems and problems will change. Ray Bradbury wrote his book in 1946. Among them, he wrote several questions such as censorship, male cruelty and loneliness. All questions appear in one or two chronicles of him. All his problems affect different roles in different ways. The censorship system is a big problem today, and in the book it appears in one of his chronicles, "Arthur's Novel II" ...
The Martian chronicle of 1950 explains the first attempt by the people of the earth to conquer and colonize Mars. The mild and telepathic Martians continue to interfere with their efforts, eventually colonize, and eventually continue to block the impact of Martian settlers on the massive nuclear war on the planet. As a social criticism of science fiction, "Mars Chronicles" reflects some of the general American anxieties in the early 1950s. Some of the expressed anxiety is fear of nuclear warfare, a simpler life's desire, response to racial discrimination and censorship, and fear of foreign political power.
Ray Bradbury's "Mars Chronicles" (published in 1950) may best explain this change. A series of short stories centered on Mars. The story about Martian civilization began to encounter human explorers. Then the story turns to dealing with the story of human settlements on earth, massacre of Martians, and the final nuclear war of the planet. In the 1950s, many classical science fiction writers wrote articles about Martian colonization. These include Arthur C. Clark and his 1951 story "Mars Sands", which is from the perspective of a human journalist who went to Mars to write human settlers. When they tried to make a living for themselves on a desert planet, they learned that Mars is doing its natural way of living.