For the love of writing
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Young Chang
Someone was typing.
Ray Bradbury heard it while wandering around UCLA more than half a
century ago. He was 30 and couldn’t afford to own an office at the time,
which meant he didn’t have a place to type.
So when Bradbury heard the far-off interplay of fingers hitting keys
and the clang of a carriage jumping to new lines, the writer decided to
investigate.
He followed the sound into the basement of UCLA’s library. There, he
found a world of typewriters that would welcome him for 10 cents every
half hour. With a stack of dimes, he wrote in this underworld every day.
And after $9.80, Bradbury completed “Fahrenheit 451.’
“It was a great place to write a novel about book burning, in the
library basement,” said the Los Angeles resident, who will give a free
lecture at the Newport Beach Central Library Tuesday.
At 81, the award-winning author is still as malleable when it comes to
where he writes.
He’s not a literary giant who can only be literary in a certain room,
at a certain desk. He writes upstairs, downstairs, any time, anywhere, he
says.
And he’ll write whatever genre or story he pleases.
Bradbury, whose novel “From the Dust Returned: A Family Remembrance”
was published last month, looks forward to his play opening in Los
Angeles next week. Called “Falling Upward,” the author says this Irish
story is the best play he’s ever written. It makes him “incredibly
happy.”
He has a book of poetry hitting stores in a few weeks.
He has five motion pictures going into production.
While waiting for all this to happen, he is adapting one of his short
stories for television and writing a screenplay to his earlier work
“Frost and Fire.”
“I’ve been writing everyday since I was 12,” Bradbury said. “I don’t
intend to stop.”
He started writing poems and short stories as a child. He then wrote
outlines for comic strips because he loved comics. In his 20s, he tackled
more seriously the art of writing short stories. At age 30 he wrote the
novel “Fahrenheit 451.”
His famed titles include “The Martian Chronicles” and “Dandelion
Wine.” Much of his work explores the issue of technology and science in
relation to mankind and morality.
“Ray Bradbury has given us brilliant commentary on human capacities in
some of the most lyrical, sometimes disturbing fantasist literature of
our times,” said Patrick Bartolic, chair of the Board of Library
Trustees. “His sensitivity to social and moral possibilities have made
him unique as a writer of speculative fiction.”
But no, Bradbury doesn’t have a favorite among his 50-plus works. He
loves them all equally, the way he doles out love to all his children and
grandchildren.
He offers similar advice to writers: “Fall in love and stay in love.”
“If you love writing, be a writer. If you want to write poetry, write
poetry. But you’ve got to be in love with it,” Bradbury said. “Be
passionate about it and do it every day of your life.”
FYI
WHAT: Ray Bradbury lectures
WHEN: 7 p.m. Tuesday
WHERE: Newport Beach Central Library’s Friends Meeting Room, 1000
Avocado Ave., Newport Beach
COST: Free
CALL: (949) 717-3800
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