The Martian Chronicles: The Complete Edition (Signed limited edition)
- SIGNED
- [Burton, Michigan and Hornsea, East Yorkshire]: Subterranean Press/PS Publishing, 2009
[Burton, Michigan and Hornsea, East Yorkshire]: Subterranean Press/PS Publishing, 2009. Signed limited edition. Fine. One of 1,000 copies signed by Ray Bradbury. A Fine copy in like slipcase. Publisher's half black cloth over marbled boards. In the publisher's slipcase (a bit dusty, but otherwise Fine). Octavo. 745 pp.
Following a race of humans who have settled on Mars in the year 1999, The Martian Chronicles (1950) details the interactions between the pioneer Earthlings and the resident Martians. Nearly wiped out by a plague that is brought from Earth, the Martians struggle to survive while individuals from both sides attempt to reconcile their new existence together. Fueled by the success of The Martian Chronicles, Bradbury composed his masterpiece, Fahrenheit 451, launching him to international fame.
This "complete edition," sprawling to nearly 750 pages, compiles The Martian Chronicles, twenty-three of Bradbury's other "Martian stories" (eight of them previously unpublished), and screenplays for potential adaptations written by Bradbury in 1963 and 1997; as well as two introductions by Bradbury, additional full-color artwork, and essays by editors Jon Scalzi, Joe Hill, Marc Scott Zicree, and Richard Matheson. Fine.
Following a race of humans who have settled on Mars in the year 1999, The Martian Chronicles (1950) details the interactions between the pioneer Earthlings and the resident Martians. Nearly wiped out by a plague that is brought from Earth, the Martians struggle to survive while individuals from both sides attempt to reconcile their new existence together. Fueled by the success of The Martian Chronicles, Bradbury composed his masterpiece, Fahrenheit 451, launching him to international fame.
This "complete edition," sprawling to nearly 750 pages, compiles The Martian Chronicles, twenty-three of Bradbury's other "Martian stories" (eight of them previously unpublished), and screenplays for potential adaptations written by Bradbury in 1963 and 1997; as well as two introductions by Bradbury, additional full-color artwork, and essays by editors Jon Scalzi, Joe Hill, Marc Scott Zicree, and Richard Matheson. Fine.
