As Steve mentioned in Good Morning News, Ray Bradbury died yesterday at the age of 91. The internet is buzzing with tributes; at the top of the must-read list is the Paris Review’s “Art of Fiction” interview with Bradburyโ€”an initial interview was conducted in the 1970s, the first draft of which George Plimpton apparently found “overly enthusiastic,” and it was finished a couple years ago:

INTERVIEWER

Does science fiction satisfy something that mainstream writing does not?

BRADBURY

Yes, it does, because the mainstream hasnโ€™t been paying attention to all the changes in our culture during the last fifty years. The major ideas of our timeโ€”developments in medicine, the importance of space exploration to advance our speciesโ€”have been neglected. The critics are generally wrong, or theyโ€™re fifteen, twenty years late. Itโ€™s a great shame. They miss out on a lot. Why the fiction of ideas should be so neglected is beyond me. I canโ€™t explain it, except in terms of intellectual snobbery.

The Atlantic recalls rejecting the short story that became Fahrenheit 451.

Here’s a keynote address he gave in 2001, which Open Culture distills down to 12 pieces of advice for young authors.

Bradbury’s got a piece in the new sci-fi issue of the New Yorker.

And then, of course, my favorite video ever made, by Bradbury superfan Rachel Bloom:

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Alison Hallett served nobly as the Mercury's arts editor from 2008-2014. Her proud legacy lives on.

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