I have always been a fan of Ray Bradbury and find his stories both imaginary and ground-breaking. His literary contribution to the field of fantasy and science fiction is quite outstanding, setting the bar forever at a new, previously unimagined level that now other writers can only strive to attain. Technically, his skill as a wordsmith was outstanding and quite original, using emotive word pictures to stimulate the imagination and to create atmosphere and mood within his stories, e.g. spiders '
touching their way across the floor', and describing the tiny forelimbs of the huge tyrannosaurus as its '
delicate watchmakers hands'.
Finding that some of his stories had been used in comic books was therefore a pleasant surprise to me, but I must confess that at first I was a little skeptical about their being able to be transposed successfully to this quite different medium. But thanks to great classic comic book artists like Al Feldstein etc., these stories were given a fresh, new look, and were equally successful in capturing the original 'Bradbury' magic! In short, we (Bradbury fans) have much to thank William M.Gaines and EC comics for!
As well as adaptations of his stories appearing in certain EC horror and crime titles, below is a list of the science fiction EC titles that featured his work...
'The Rocketman' and 'Kaleidoscope' ('Home To Stay') Weird Fantasy #13 (May 1952)
'There Will Come Soft Rains...' Weird Fantasy #17 (Jan 1953)
'The Long Years!' Weird Science #17 (Jan 1953)
'Mars Is In Heaven!' Weird Science #18 (Mar 1953)
'Zero Hour' Weird Fantasy #18 (Mar 1953)
'King of the Grey Spaces!' Weird Fantasy #19 (May 1953)
'The One Who Waits' Weird Science #19 (May 1953)
'Changeling' ('Surprise Package') Weird Science #20 (July 1953)
'I Rocket' Weird Fantasy #20 (July 1953)
'The Million Year Picnic' Weird Fantasy #21 (Sept 1953)
'Punishment Without Crime' Weird Science #21 (Sept 1953)
'Outcast Of The Stars' Weird Science #22 (Nov 1953)
'The Silent Towns' Weird Fantasy #22 (Nov 1953)
'The Flying Machine' Weird Science-Fantasy #23 (Mar 1954)
'A Sound Of Thunder' Weird Science-Fantasy #25 (Sept 1954)
Anybody else out there shares my enthusiasm for Bradbury's tales of the imagination??