The Mars Chronicle Mars Chronicle is a series of short stories by Ray Bradbury. All these stories are related to the idea of a person visiting Mars, but only through the loose clue. Sometimes, it seems that Bradbury is grabbing and searching for something that can collect randomly the human context in which his idea is created. It is the fourth planet from the sun, the neighbors of the earth, and the Martian Chronicle of Brad Berry, Mars, including the story of all these stories and incorporating them into a 2 hour special novel from a 30 minute children's programming story is. stage
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.
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.
Martian Chronicle is a modified version of the 1950 SF short story by Ray Bradbury that recorded Martian, Martian and new settlers who fled from the planet and eventually destroyed by atom. Collision between. This book is between episodes of short stories and novels, including SF novel magazines first published by Brad Berry in the late 1940s. These stories are loosely knitted with a series of short interspersed episodes for publication.