Fahrenheit 451 author Ray Bradbury died Wednesday in Los Angeles,
his biographer has confirmed. He was 91. The science-fiction author was
born in Illinois, a descendant of Mary Bradbury, a woman who was tried
and hanged as a witch in the Salem witch trials. His first collection of
short stories, Dark Carnival, was published in 1947, and a
chance encounter in a Los Angeles bookstore put him in touch with
respected critic Charles Isherwood, who then gave a glowing review to The Martian Chronicles. Three years later, Bradbury became a household name with the publication of Fahrenheit 451,
the story of a book-burning future. The author of 11 novels, Bradbury
also published numerous short-story collections, plays, screenplays, and
graphic novels. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in
2004.
Among the many things being said about Bradbury, that is a surprise to me: that he was a descendant of Mary Bradbury, a woman who was tried
and hanged as a witch in the Salem witch trials.
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