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"The Dragon" is a short story by American writer Ray Bradbury, originally published in 1948 in the magazine Esquire. A limited edition (352 copies, signed and numbered or lettered) of the story was published by Footsteps Press in 1988.
The Dragon Who Ate His Tail is a collection of short stories, screenplay fragments and manuscript facsimiles by American writer Ray Bradbury. It was published by Gauntlet Press in 2007 as a chapbook. The title story was previously unpublished.
A Pleasure to Burn: Fahrenheit 451 Stories is a collection of short stories by American writer Ray Bradbury, first published August 17, 2010.A companion to novel Fahrenheit 451, it was later released under the Harper Perennial imprint of HarperCollins publishing was in 2011.
"The Dragon Danced at Midnight" "The Nineteenth" "Beasts" "Autumn Afternoon" "Where All Is Emptiness There Is Room to Move" "One-Woman Show" "The Laurel and Hardy Alpha Centauri Farewell Tour" "Leftovers" "One More for the Road" "Tangerine" "With Smiles as Wide as Summer" "Time Intervening" "The Enemy in the Wheat" "Fore!" "My Son, Max"
A comprehensive overview of Ray Bradbury's written works by Cochran, David (2000), "'I'm Being Ironic': Imperialism, Mass Culture, and the Fantastic World of Ray Bradbury", in Krstovic, Jelena (ed.), America Noir: Underground Writers and Filmmakers of the Postwar Era, Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 55–72, ISBN ...
Ray Bradbury, "The Dragon" (1955): set simultaneously in the recent and distant past, the short story features a pair of knights setting out to fight what they think is a dragon. After they are killed by it, it is revealed that the "Dragon" is actually a steam train.
The Fog Horn & Other Stories is a collection of six short stories written by Ray Bradbury. The collection, published in Japan, is published in English for school use.
Dark Carnival is a short story collection by American writer Ray Bradbury, first published October 1947 by Arkham House. [1] It was his debut book, and many of the stories were reprinted elsewhere. Contents