Author Ray
Bradbury has died in Los Angeles at the age of 91.
His daughter Alexandra confirmed that her father died
on Tuesday night in Southern California. She did not have additional details.
Bradbury wrote hundreds of novels, short stories,
plays and television and film scripts in a career dating back to the 1940s.
His most famous novels include Fahrenheit 451 and
Something Wicked This Way Comes.
The writer's grandson, Danny Karapetian, said:
"He influenced so many artists, writers, teachers, scientists, and it's
always really touching and comforting to hear their stories.
"His legacy lives on in his monumental body of
books, film, television and theatre, but more importantly, in the minds and
hearts of anyone who read him, because to read him was to know him".
The author was married to Marguerite McClure, who
died in 2003. The couple had four daughters together.
Bradbury was born in Illinois, and as a teenager
moved with his family to Los Angeles.
For three years after leaving school he earned a
living selling newspapers, writing in his spare time.
From the early 1940s his short stories started to
appear in magazines like Weird Tales, Astounding Science Fiction and Captain
Future.
His first book, Dark Carnival, appeared in 1947, and
three years later he began to establish his reputation with The Martian
Chronicles, a collection of stories about materialistic Earthmen colonising and
ruinously exploiting Mars.
His most celebrated novel, Fahrenheit 451, published
in 1953, depicts a future society in which books are banned.
The story, which gets its title from the temperature
at which paper spontaneously ignites, proved to be uncannily prophetic - the
characters are addicted to television soap operas, while miniature headphones,
known as "ear thimbles", provide a constant stream of music and news.
A film version, directed by Francois Truffaut, was
released in 1966.
Bradbury also wrote several works for film and
television. He wrote the screenplay for John Huston's film Moby Dick and
scripts for many TV series, including Suspense, The Alfred Hitchcock Show and
The Twilight Zone.
Bradbury was passionate about literature. In 2008, he
said: "If you know how to read, you have a complete education about life,
then you know how to vote within a democracy.
"But if you don't know how to read, you don't
know how to decide. That's the great thing about our country - we're a
democracy of readers, and we should keep it that way."
Source: BBC
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