There may be no greater writer of speculative fiction shorts
than Ray Bradbury, and The Illustrated
Man is one of his most celebrated collections. Tied loosely around a framing device more
dependent on Something Wicked This Way
Comes than anything inherent to the collection, the stories plumb the depth
of the human heart and emerge bittersweet.
The collection opens with the narrator traveling the Wisconsin
countryside by foot. His fire a beacon
in the night, a man who’s just been kicked out of the circus comes to join
him. Covered in tattoos, the man asks
for the narrator’s hospitality before settling into the story of how he came to
be unemployed. A deal with a witch gone
wrong, the tattoos he asked for are not what he received: most people who see
the metamorphing images end up dead shortly thereafter. The circumstances dictate his terms of
employment are most often of the short variety.
Curling up beside the fire, the man eventually goes to sleep, leaving
the narrator to watch the illustrations come to life on his tattooed flesh.
What follows are 18 stories set amongst a variety of technical
possibilities. None connected in any
fashion save humanity, the framing device is a loose one at best, and indeed,
Bradbury abandons it in the early going.
Parenting, religion, desire, aging, technology, and the value of books
are only a handful of the subjects broached.
Bradbury being Bradbury, the stories remain a rich mosaic of the subtle
elements of life.
In The Illustrated Man
are a story about one man’s near encounter with Jesus in space. Two stories seem studies for Fahrenheit 451—books an evil to be
destroyed. Space a long journey, another
tells of a man who has trouble handling the distance while traveling. There is a satirical piece on the classic
Martian invasion, while another uses Mars as commentary on race: an all black
Mars visited by a lone white man in a rocket ship. (There is even a reprint of a story from The Martian Chronicles, “The Fire
Balloons”.) The rocket is a recurring motif. Along with the aforementioned Chronicles story, “The Rocket Man” tells
of the life of a workaday spaceman and the divide he feels in his heart to both
explore the stars and be on Earth with his family. “The Rocket” tells of a poor man and how he
eventually fulfills his children’s dreams by getting them into space. There is even a time travel story involving
the escape from war.
In the end, The
Illustrated Man is a collection in which the individual stories outshine
the quality of the framing device it is so named after. Bradbury ignoring the practicalities of
technology and instead utilizing it as a tool to explore humanity, there is no
question, however: the collection remains science fiction given the abundance
of rockets, space travel, Mars, gadgets, and other futuristic technology. Many
of the stories well known outside collection, e.g. “The Veldt”, the book is one
that can easily be digested in pieces with nothing to the whole lost.
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