Ray Bradbury has a vacation house in Palm  Springs, California, in the desert at the base of the Santa Rosa  mountains. It’s a Rat Pack–era affair, with a chrome-and-turquoise  kitchen and a small swimming pool in back. A few years ago, Bradbury let  me look through some files stored in his garage as part of my research  for a biography. Inside a tiny storage closet I found a compact filing  cabinet covered in dust and fallen ceiling plaster, which contained,  amid a flurry of tear sheets and yellowing book contracts, a folder  marked paris review. In the folder was the manuscript of a remarkable  unpublished interview that this magazine had conducted with the author  in the late 1970s.
 It’s unclear why the interview was  abandoned, but according to an attached editorial memo, editor George  Plimpton found the first draft “a bit informal in places, maybe overly  enthusiastic.” Bradbury, who will turn ninety in August, cannot recall  why he never finished the interview; he figures that when he was asked  to revisit it, he had moved on to other projects. But with the  rediscovery of the manuscript, he agreed to give it another go and bring  it up to date. Since the original interviewer, William Plummer, a Paris Review contributing editor, died in 2001, we supplemented the original sessions with new conversations.
 Bradbury was born in 1920 in Waukegan,  Illinois, the son of a lineman for the local power company. As a child,  he developed a passion for the books of L. Frank Baum and Edgar Allan  Poe and immersed himself in popular culture, from cinema to comic strips  to traveling circuses. Because Bradbury’s father was often out of work  during the twenties and thirties, the family repeatedly moved between  Illinois and Tucson, Arizona. His sense of uprootedness and dislocation  was compounded by the death of his beloved grandfather when he was five,  and his baby sister’s death from pneumonia two years later. The  experience of great loss appears frequently in his work.
 By the spring of 1934, lured by the  prospects of sunshine and steady employment, the Bradbury family moved  to California, where Bradbury has lived ever since. As a teenager, he  roller-skated all over Hollywood, collecting autographs and taking  photos with stars like Jean Harlow, Marlene Dietrich, and George Burns.  After he graduated from Los Angeles High School in 1938, he joined the  Los Angeles Science Fiction League, befriending writers Robert Heinlein  and Leigh Brackett. In 1940, with the help of Heinlein, he made his  first professional sale, to a West Coast literary magazine called Script.  Bradbury’s poor eyesight kept him out of the Second World War, and it  was during those years that he established himself in the pages of  pulp-fiction magazines like Weird Tales and Astounding Science Fiction. The Martian Chronicles,  his second book, was embraced by the science-fiction community as well  as critics, a rare achievement for the genre. Christopher Isherwood  hailed Bradbury as “truly original” and a “very great and unusual  talent.” Three years later Bradbury published the novel for which he is  best known, Fahrenheit 451.
 In all, Bradbury has written more than fifty books, including The Illustrated Man, Dandelion Wine, Something Wicked This Way Comes, and his 2009 story collection, We’ll Always Have Paris. He has worked often in television and film, writing teleplays for Alfred Hitchcock Presents and the screenplay for John Huston’s 1956 adaptation of Moby-Dick.  In 1964, he established the Pandemonium Theatre Company, where he  started producing his own plays—he is still actively involved with the  theater today. He has also published several poetry collections,  including When Elephants Last in the Dooryard Bloomed. He has  even worked in architecture, contributing to the design of San Diego’s  Westfield Horton Plaza and the interior of Spaceship Earth at Disney’s  EPCOT Center. For his life’s achievements, he was awarded the Medal for  Distinguished Contribution to American Letters from the National Book  Foundation in 2000 and, in 2004, the National Medal of Arts.
 Despite recent setbacks—a stroke in 1999  and the death of Marguerite, his wife of fifty-six years, in  2003—Bradbury has remained extraordinarily active. He continues to write  and he remains charming and filled with boyish jubilation. When dining  out he regularly orders vanilla ice cream with chocolate sauce for  dessert. He has just completed a new collection of short stories,  tentatively titled “Juggernaut.” He recently told me he still lives by  his lifelong credo, “Jump off the cliff and build your wings on the way  down.”
  
 INTERVIEWER
 Why do you write science fiction? 
 RAY BRADBURY
 Science fiction is the fiction of ideas.  Ideas excite me, and as soon as I get excited, the adrenaline gets going  and the next thing I know I’m borrowing energy from the ideas  themselves. Science fiction is any idea that occurs in the head and  doesn’t exist yet, but soon will, and will change everything for  everybody, and nothing will ever be the same again. As soon as you have  an idea that changes some small part of the world you are writing  science fiction. It is always the art of the possible, never the  impossible.
 Imagine if sixty years ago, at the start of  my writing career, I had thought to write a story about a woman who  swallowed a pill and destroyed the Catholic Church, causing the advent  of women’s liberation. That story probably would have been laughed at,  but it was within the realm of the possible and would have made great  science fiction. If I’d lived in the late eighteen hundreds I might have  written a story predicting that strange vehicles would soon move across  the landscape of the United States and would kill two million people in  a period of seventy years. Science fiction is not just the art of the  possible, but of the obvious. Once the automobile appeared you could  have predicted that it would destroy as many people as it did.
 INTERVIEWER
 Does science fiction satisfy something that mainstream writing does not? 
 BRADBURY
 Yes, it does, because the mainstream hasn’t  been paying attention to all the changes in our culture during the last  fifty years. The major ideas of our time—developments in medicine, the  importance of space exploration to advance our species—have been  neglected. The critics are generally wrong, or they’re fifteen, twenty  years late. It’s a great shame. They miss out on a lot. Why the fiction  of ideas should be so neglected is beyond me. I can’t explain it, except  in terms of intellectual snobbery. 
 INTERVIEWER
 There was a time, though, wasn’t there, when you wanted recognition across the board from critics and intellectuals? 
 BRADBURY
 Of course. But not anymore. If I’d found  out that Norman Mailer liked me, I’d have killed myself. I think he was  too hung up. I’m glad Kurt Vonnegut didn’t like me either. He had  problems, terrible problems. He couldn’t see the world the way I see it.  I suppose I’m too much Pollyanna, he was too much Cassandra. Actually I  prefer to see myself as the Janus, the two-faced god who is half  Pollyanna and half Cassandra, warning of the future and perhaps living  too much in the past—a combination of both. But I don’t think I’m too overoptimistic. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Vonnegut was written off as a  science-fiction writer for a long time. Then it was decided that he  wasn’t ever a science-fiction writer in the first place, and he was  redeemed for the mainstream. So Vonnegut became “literature,” and you’re  still on the verge. Do you think Vonnegut made it because he was a  Cassandra? 
 BRADBURY
 Yes, that’s part of it. It’s the terrible  creative negativism, admired by New York critics, that caused his  celebrity. New Yorkers love to dupe themselves, as well as doom  themselves. I haven’t had to live like that. I’m a California boy. I  don’t tell anyone how to write and no one tells me. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Yet you did receive the Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. How important was that for you?
 BRADBURY
 It was a fantastic evening. There was a  real problem getting back to my hotel room, though. The hotel where they  held the ceremony in New York was so huge, it filled me with despair.  Since my stroke, I walk very slowly. I saw a sign that night that said,  next restroom: two hundred and eighty miles. The registration desk was  on the eighth floor. You have to wait ten minutes for an elevator just  to go up and register! That night some of the women were taking me back  to my room and I said, For God’s sake, where’s the men’s room? We  couldn’t find one. One of the girls said, There’s a potted palm over  there, why don’t you go use it? So I went over. Nobody saw me. At least I  don’t think so. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Was that award a signal that science fiction had become respectable? 
 BRADBURY
 To some extent. It took a long time for  people simply to allow us out in the open and stop making fun of us.  When I was a young writer if you went to a party and told somebody you  were a science-fiction writer you would be insulted. They would call you  Flash Gordon all evening, or Buck Rogers. Of course sixty years ago  hardly any books were being published in the field. Back in 1946, as I  remember, there were only two science-fiction anthologies published. We  couldn’t afford to buy them anyway, since we were all too poor. That’s  how bereft we were, that’s how sparse the field was, that’s how  unimportant it all was. And when the first books finally began to be  published, lots of them in the early fifties, they weren’t reviewed by  good literary magazines. We were all closet science-fiction writers. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Does science fiction offer the writer an easier way to explore a conceptual premise? 
 BRADBURY
 Take Fahrenheit 451. You’re  dealing with book burning, a very serious subject. You’ve got to be  careful you don’t start lecturing people. So you put your story a few  years into the future and you invent a fireman who has been burning  books instead of putting out fires—which is a grand idea in itself—and  you start him on the adventure of discovering that maybe books shouldn’t  be burned. He reads his first book. He falls in love. And then you send  him out into the world to change his life. It’s a great suspense story,  and locked into it is this great truth you want to tell, without  pontificating.
 I often use the metaphor of Perseus and the  head of Medusa when I speak of science fiction. Instead of looking into  the face of truth, you look over your shoulder into the bronze surface  of a reflecting shield. Then you reach back with your sword and cut off  the head of Medusa. Science fiction pretends to look into the future but  it’s really looking at a reflection of what is already in front of us.  So you have a ricochet vision, a ricochet that enables you to have fun  with it, instead of being self-conscious and superintellectual. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Do you read your science-fiction contemporaries? 
 BRADBURY
 I’ve always believed that you should do  very little reading in your own field once you’re into it. But at the  start it’s good to know what everyone’s doing. When I was seventeen I  read everything by Robert Heinlein and Arthur Clarke, and the early  writings of Theodore Sturgeon and Van Vogt—all the people who appeared  in Astounding Science Fiction—but my big science-fiction  influences are H. G. Wells and Jules Verne. I’ve found that I’m a lot  like Verne—a writer of moral fables, an instructor in the humanities. He  believes the human being is in a strange situation in a very strange  world, and he believes that we can triumph by behaving morally. His hero  Nemo—who in a way is the flip side of Melville’s madman, Ahab—goes  about the world taking weapons away from people to instruct them toward  peace. 
 INTERVIEWER
 How about writers younger than you? 
 BRADBURY
 I prefer not to read the younger writers in  the field. Quite often you can be depressed by discovering they’ve  happened onto an idea you yourself are working on. What you want is  simply to get on with your own work. 
 INTERVIEWER
 How early did you begin writing? 
 BRADBURY
 It started with Poe. I imitated him from  the time I was twelve until I was about eighteen. I fell in love with  the jewelry of Poe. He’s a gem encruster, isn’t he? Same with Edgar Rice  Burroughs and John Carter. I was doing traditional horror stories,  which I think everyone who goes into the field starts out with—you know,  people getting locked in tombs. I drew Egyptian mazes.
 Everything went into ferment that one year,  1932, when I was twelve. There was Poe, Carter, Burroughs, the comics. I  listened to a lot of imaginative radio shows, especially one called Chandu the Magician.  I’m sure it was quite junky, but not to me. Every night when the show  went off the air I sat down and, from memory, wrote out the whole  script. I couldn’t help myself. Chandu was against all the villains of  the world and so was I. He responded to a psychic summons and so did I.
 I loved to illustrate, too, and I was a  cartoonist. I always wanted my own comic strip. So I was not only  writing about Tarzan, I was drawing my own Sunday panels. I did the  usual adventure stories, located them in South America or among the  Aztecs or in Africa. There was always the beautiful maiden and the  sacrifice. So I knew I was going into one of the arts: I was drawing,  acting, and writing. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Where did you do your acting? 
 BRADBURY
 One day in Tucson, Arizona, when I was  twelve, I told all my friends I was going to go down to the nearest  radio station to become an actor. My friends snorted and said, Do you  know anyone down there? I said no. They said, Do you have any pull with  anyone? I said no. I’ll just hang around and they’ll discover how  talented I am. So I went to the radio station, hung around for two weeks  emptying ashtrays and running out for newspapers and just being  underfoot. And two weeks later I wound up on radio every Saturday night  reading the comics to the kiddies: Bringing Up Father, Tailspin Tommy, and Buck Rogers. 
 INTERVIEWER
 You seem to have been open to a variety of influences. 
 BRADBURY
 A conglomerate heap of trash, that’s what I  am. But it burns with a high flame. I’ve had my “literary” loves, too. I  like to think of myself on a train going across America at midnight,  conversing with my favorite authors, and on that train would be people  like George Bernard Shaw, who was interested in the fiction of ideas. He  himself on occasion wrote things that could be dubbed science fiction.  We’d sit up late into the night turning over ideas and saying, Well, if  this is true about women in 1900, what is it going to be in the year  2050? 
 INTERVIEWER
 Who else would be on that train? 
 BRADBURY
 A lot of poets: Hopkins, Frost, Shakespeare. And writers like Steinbeck, Huxley, and Thomas Wolfe.
 INTERVIEWER
 How has Wolfe helped you? 
 BRADBURY
 He was a great romantic. When you’re  nineteen, he opens the doors of the world for you. We use certain  authors at certain times of our lives, and we may never go back to them  again. Wolfe is perfect when you’re nineteen. If you fall in love with  Shaw when you’re thirty it’s going to be a lifetime love. And I think  that’s true of certain books by Thomas Mann as well. I read Death in Venice when  I was twenty, and it’s gotten better every year since. Style is truth.  Once you nail down what you want to say about yourself and your fears  and your life, then that becomes your style and you go to those writers  who can teach you how to use words to fit your truth. I learned from  John Steinbeck how to write objectively and yet insert all of the  insights without too much extra comment. I learned a hell of a lot from  John Collier and Gerald Heard, and I fell madly in love with a number of  women writers, especially Eudora Welty and Katherine Anne Porter. I  still go back and reread Edith Wharton and Jessamyn West—The Friendly Persuasion is one of my favorite books of short stories. 
 INTERVIEWER
 The Martian Chronicles, your first  major success, was called a novel, but it’s really a book of short  stories, many of which had appeared in pulp-fiction magazines during the  forties. Why did you decide to collect them as a novel? 
 BRADBURY
 Around 1947, when I published my first novel, Dark Carnival, I met the secretary of Norman Corwin, a big name in radio—a director, writer, and producer. Through her I sent him a copy of Dark Carnival  and wrote a letter saying, If you like this book as much as I like your  work, I’d like to buy you drinks someday. A week later the phone rang  and it was Norman. He said, You’re not buying me drinks, I’m buying you  dinner. That was the start of a lifelong friendship. That first time he  took me to dinner I told him about my Martian story “Ylla.” He said,  Wow, that’s great, write more of those. So I did. In a way, that was  what caused The Martian Chronicles to be born.
 There was another reason. In 1949, my wife  Maggie became pregnant with our first daughter, Susan. Up until then,  Maggie had worked full-time and I stayed home writing my short stories.  But now that she was going to have the baby, I needed to earn more  money. I needed a book contract. Norman suggested I travel to New York  City to meet editors and make an impression, so I took a Greyhound bus  to New York and stayed at the YMCA, fifty cents a night. I took my  stories around to a dozen publishers. Nobody wanted them. They said, We  don’t publish stories. Nobody reads them. Don’t you have a novel? I  said, No, I don’t. I’m a sprinter, not a marathon runner. I was ready to  go home when, on my last night, I had dinner with an editor at  Doubleday named Walter Bradbury—no relation. He said, Wouldn’t there be a  book if you took all those Martian stories and tied them together? You  could call it “The Martian Chronicles.” It was his title, not mine. I  said, Oh, my God. I had read Winesburg, Ohio when I was  twenty-four years old, in 1944. I was so taken with it that I thought,  Someday I’d like to write a book like this, but I’d set it on Mars. I’d  actually made a note about this in 1944, but I’d forgotten about it.
 I stayed up all night at the YMCA and typed  out an outline. I took it to him the next morning. He read it and said,  I’ll give you a check for seven hundred and fifty bucks. I went back to  Los Angeles and connected all the short stories and it became The Martian Chronicles. It’s called a novel, but you’re right, it’s really a book of short stories all tied together.
 INTERVIEWER
 One of the most popular stories in the book  is “There Will Come Soft Rains,” about a mechanized house that  continues to operate after the atomic bomb has been dropped. There are  no people in that story. Where did you get the idea for that? 
 BRADBURY
 After Hiroshima was bombed I saw a  photograph of the side of a house with the shadows of the people who had  lived there burned into the wall from the intensity of the bomb. The  people were gone, but their shadows remained. That affected me so much, I  wrote the story. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Some of the passages in The Martian Chronicles, as well as some of your other books, are intensely lyrical. Where did that lyricism come from? 
 BRADBURY
 From reading so much poetry every day of my  life. My favorite writers have been those who’ve said things well. I  used to study Eudora Welty. She has the remarkable ability to give you  atmosphere, character, and motion in a single line. In one line! You  must study these things to be a good writer. Welty would have a woman  simply come into a room and look around. In one sweep she gave you the  feel of the room, the sense of the woman’s character, and the action  itself. All in twenty words. And you say, How’d she do that? What  adjective? What verb? What noun? How did she select them and put them  together? I was an intense student. Sometimes I’d get an old copy of  Wolfe and cut out paragraphs and paste them in my story, because I  couldn’t do it, you see. I was so frustrated! And then I’d retype whole  sections of other people’s novels just to see how it felt coming out.  Learn their rhythm. 
 INTERVIEWER
 What about Proust, Joyce, Flaubert,  Nabokov—writers who tend to think of literature in terms of style and  form. Has that line of thought ever interested you? 
 BRADBURY
 No. If people put me to sleep, they put me  to sleep. God, I’ve tried to read Proust so often, and I recognize the  beauty of his style, but he puts me to sleep. The same for Joyce. Joyce  doesn’t have many ideas. I’m completely idea oriented, and I appreciate  certain kinds of French writing and English storytelling more. I just  can’t imagine being in a world and not being fascinated with what ideas  are doing to us. 
 INTERVIEWER
 You’re self-educated, aren’t you?
 BRADBURY
 Yes, I am. I’m completely library educated.  I’ve never been to college. I went down to the library when I was in  grade school in Waukegan, and in high school in Los Angeles, and spent  long days every summer in the library. I used to steal magazines from a  store on Genesee Street, in Waukegan, and read them and then steal them  back on the racks again. That way I took the print off with my eyeballs  and stayed honest. I didn’t want to be a permanent thief, and I was very  careful to wash my hands before I read them. But with the library, it’s  like catnip, I suppose: you begin to run in circles because there’s so  much to look at and read. And it’s far more fun than going to school,  simply because you make up your own list and you don’t have to listen to  anyone. When I would see some of the books my kids were forced to bring  home and read by some of their teachers, and were graded on—well, what  if you don’t like those books?
 I am a librarian. I discovered me in the library. I went to find me  in the library. Before I fell in love with libraries, I was just a  six-year-old boy. The library fueled all of my curiosities, from  dinosaurs to ancient Egypt. When I graduated from high school in 1938, I  began going to the library three nights a week. I did this every week  for almost ten years and finally, in 1947, around the time I got  married, I figured I was done. So I graduated from the library when I  was twenty-seven. I discovered that the library is the real school. 
 INTERVIEWER
 You have said that you don’t believe in going to college to learn to write. Why is that? 
 BRADBURY
 You can’t learn to write in college. It’s a  very bad place for writers because the teachers always think they know  more than you do—and they don’t. They have prejudices. They may like  Henry James, but what if you don’t want to write like Henry James? They  may like John Irving, for instance, who’s the bore of all time. A lot of  the people whose work they’ve taught in the schools for the last thirty  years, I can’t understand why people read them and why they are taught.  The library, on the other hand, has no biases. The information is all  there for you to interpret. You don’t have someone telling you what to  think. You discover it for yourself. 
 INTERVIEWER
 But your books are taught widely in schools. 
 BRADBURY
 Do you know why teachers use me? Because I  speak in tongues. I write metaphors. Every one of my stories is a  metaphor you can remember. The great religions are all metaphor. We  appreciate things like Daniel and the lion’s den, and the Tower of  Babel. People remember these metaphors because they are so vivid you  can’t get free of them and that’s what kids like in school. They read  about rocket ships and encounters in space, tales of dinosaurs. All my  life I’ve been running through the fields and picking up bright objects.  I turn one over and say, Yeah, there’s a story. And that’s what kids  like. Today, my stories are in a thousand anthologies. And I’m in good  company. The other writers are quite often dead people who wrote in  metaphors: Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, Washington Irving,  Nathaniel Hawthorne. All these people wrote for children. They may have  pretended not to, but they did. 
 INTERVIEWER
 How important is it to you to follow your own instincts? 
 BRADBURY
 Oh, God. It’s everything. I was offered the chance to write War and Peace for  the screen a few decades ago. The American version with King Vidor  directing. I turned it down. Everyone said, How could you do that?  That’s ridiculous, it’s a great book! I said, Well, it isn’t for me. I  can’t read it. I can’t get through it, I tried. That doesn’t mean the  book’s bad. I just am not prepared for it. It portrays a very special  culture. The names throw me. My wife loved it. She read it once every  three years for twenty years. They offered the usual amount for a  screenplay like that, a hundred thousand dollars, but you cannot do  things for money in this world. I don’t care how much they  offer you, and I don’t care how poor you are. There’s only one excuse  ever to take money under those circumstances: If someone in your family  is horribly ill and the doctor bills are piled up so high that you’re  all going to be destroyed. Then I’d say, Go on and take the job. Go do War and Peace and do a lousy job. And be sorry later. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Why did you do Moby-Dick? 
 BRADBURY
 I had fallen in love with John Huston’s work when I was in my twenties. I saw The Maltese Falcon fifteen times, and The Treasure of the Sierra Madre  scores of times. When I was twenty-nine I attended a film screening and  John Huston was sitting right behind me. I wanted to turn, grab his  hand, and say, I love you and I want to work with you. But I held off  and waited until I had three books published, so I’d have proof of my  love. I called my agent and said, Now I want to meet John Huston. We met  on St. Valentine’s night, 1951, which is a great way to start a love  affair. I said, Here are my books. If you like them, someday we must  work together. A couple of years later, out of the blue, he called me up  and said, Do you have some time to come to Europe and write Moby-Dick for  the screen? I said, I don’t know, I’ve never been able to read the damn  thing. So here I was confronted with a dilemma: Here’s a man that I  love and whose work I admire. He’s offering me a job. Now, a lot of  people would say, Grab it! Jesus, you like him, don’t ya? I said, Tell  you what, I’ll go home tonight and I’ll read as much as I can, and I’ll  come back for lunch tomorrow. By that time I will know how I feel about  Melville. Because I’ve had copies of Moby-Dick around the house for years. So I went home and I read Moby-Dick. Strangely enough, a month earlier I’d been wandering around the house one night and picked up Moby-Dick and said to my wife, I wonder when I’m going to read this thing? So here I am sitting down to read it.
 I dove into the middle of it instead of  starting at the beginning. I came across a lot of beautiful poetry about  the whiteness of the whale and the colors of nightmares and the great  spirit’s spout. And I came upon a section toward the end where Ahab  stands at the rail and says: “It is a mild, mild wind, and a mild  looking sky; and the air smells now, as if it blew from a far-away  meadow; they have been making hay somewhere under the slopes of the  Andes, Starbuck, and the mowers are sleeping among the new-mown hay.” I  turned back to the start: “Call me Ishmael.” I was in love! You fall in  love with poetry. You fall in love with Shakespeare. I’d been in love  with Shakespeare since I was fourteen. I was able to do the job not  because I was in love with Melville, but because I was in love with  Shakespeare. Shakespeare wrote Moby-Dick, using Melville as a Ouija board.
 The day I went to see Huston I asked,  Should I read up on the Freudians and Jungians and their interpretations  of the white whale? He said, Hell no, I’m hiring Bradbury! Whatever is  right or wrong about the screenplay will be yours, so we can at least  say the skin around it is your skin.
 So after I’d read the book multitudinous  times, I wrote the beginning on the way to Europe on the boat, and that  stayed. But everything else was so difficult. I had to borrow bits and  pieces from late in the book and push them up front, because the novel  is not constructed like a screenplay. It’s all over the place, a giant  cannonade of impressions. And it’s a play too. Shakespearean asides,  stage directions, everything.
 I got out of the bed one morning in London,  walked over to the mirror and said, I am Herman Melville. The ghost of  Melville spoke to me and on that day I rewrote the last thirty pages of  the screenplay. It all came out in one passionate explosion. I ran  across London and took it to Huston. He said, My God, this is it.
 INTERVIEWER
 Yet the ending is your own, not Melville’s. 
 BRADBURY
 Yes, but it really works, because I came up  with a revelation. To adapt for the screen you’ve got to decide what to  throw overboard. I didn’t want Fedallah, the mysterious Parsi  harpooner, because he’s a terrible bore and he’d turn the whole thing  into comedy. He’s the extra mystical symbol that breaks the whale’s  back. If you’re not careful in tragedy, one extra rape, one extra  incest, one extra murder and it’s hoo-haw time all of a sudden. So I got  rid of Fedallah, and that leaves us at the end with no one to go down  with the whale. So, hell, it’s only natural that Moby Dick takes Ahab  down with him and comes back up with all these harpoon lines, and Ahab  gestures, so when the men follow him they are destroyed. Well, that’s  not in the book. I’m sorry, but I’m proud of that. Awfully proud of  that. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Do the novel and short story present different problems to you? 
 BRADBURY
 Yes, the problem of the novel is to stay  truthful. The short story, if you really are intense and you have an  exciting idea, writes itself in a few hours. I try to encourage my  student friends and my writer friends to write a short story in one day  so it has a skin around it, its own intensity, its own life, its own  reason for being. There’s a reason why the idea occurred to you  at that hour anyway, so go with that and investigate it, get it down.  Two or three thousand words in a few hours is not that hard. Don’t let  people interfere with you. Boot ’em out, turn off the phone, hide away,  get it done. If you carry a short story over to the next day you may  overnight intellectualize something about it and try to make it too  fancy, try to please someone.
 But a novel has all kinds of pitfalls  because it takes longer and you are around people, and if you’re not  careful you will talk about it. The novel is also hard to write in terms  of keeping your love intense. It’s hard to stay erect for two hundred  days. So, get the big truth first. If you get the big truth, the small  truths will accumulate around it. Let them be magnetized to it, drawn to  it, and then cling to it. 
 INTERVIEWER
 What are some specific problems you’ve had with any of your novels? 
 BRADBURY
 With Fahrenheit 451, Montag came  up to me and said, I’m going crazy. I said, What’s the matter, Montag?  I’ve been burning books, he said. I said, Well, don’t you want to  anymore? He said, No, I love them. I said, Go do something about it. And  he wrote the book for me in nine days. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Do you keep a tight work schedule? 
 BRADBURY
 My passions drive me to the typewriter  every day of my life, and they have driven me there since I was twelve.  So I never have to worry about schedules. Some new thing is always  exploding in me, and it schedules me, I don’t schedule it. It says: Get  to the typewriter right now and finish this. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Where do you do your writing? 
 BRADBURY
 I can work anywhere. I wrote in bedrooms  and living rooms when I was growing up with my parents and my brother in  a small house in Los Angeles. I worked on my typewriter in the living  room, with the radio and my mother and dad and brother all talking at  the same time. Later on, when I wanted to write Fahrenheit 451,  I went up to UCLA and found a basement typing room where, if you  inserted ten cents into the typewriter, you could buy thirty minutes of  typing time. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Have you ever used a computer? 
 BRADBURY
 Up until my stroke, I used a typewriter. An  IBM Selectric. Never a computer. A computer’s a typewriter. Why would I  need another typewriter? I have one. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Most would argue that a computer makes revising a whole lot easier. Not to mention spell-check. 
 BRADBURY
 I’ve been writing for seventy years, if I don’t know how to spell now . . . 
 INTERVIEWER
 Do you keep a notebook? 
 BRADBURY
 No. As soon as I get an idea, I write a  short story, or I start a novel, or I do a poem. So I have no need for a  notebook. I do keep files of ideas and stories that didn’t quite work a  year ago, five years ago, ten years ago. I come back to them later and I  look through the titles. It’s like a father bird coming with a worm.  You look down at all these hungry little beaks—all these stories waiting  to be finished—and you say to them, Which of you needs to be fed? Which  of you needs to be finished today? And the story that yells the  loudest, the idea that stands up and opens its mouth, is the one that  gets fed. And I pull it out of the file and finish it within a few  hours. 
 INTERVIEWER
 In Zen in the Art of Writing, you  wrote that early on in your career you made lists of nouns as a way to  generate story ideas: the Jar, the Cistern, the Lake, the Skeleton. Do  you still do this? 
 BRADBURY
 Not as much, because I just automatically  generate ideas now. But in the old days I knew I had to dredge my  subconscious, and the nouns did this. I learned this early on. Three  things are in your head: First, everything you have experienced from the  day of your birth until right now. Every single second, every single  hour, every single day. Then, how you reacted to those events in the  minute of their happening, whether they were disastrous or joyful. Those  are two things you have in your mind to give you material. Then,  separate from the living experiences are all the art experiences you’ve  had, the things you’ve learned from other writers, artists, poets, film  directors, and composers. So all of this is in your mind as a fabulous  mulch and you have to bring it out. How do you do that? I did it by  making lists of nouns and then asking, What does each noun mean? You can  go and make up your own list right now and it would be different than  mine. The night. The crickets. The train whistle. The basement. The  attic. The tennis shoes. The fireworks. All these things are very  personal. Then, when you get the list down, you begin to word-associate  around it. You ask, Why did I put this word down? What does it mean to  me? Why did I put this noun down and not some other word? Do  this and you’re on your way to being a good writer. You can’t write for  other people. You can’t write for the left or the right, this religion  or that religion, or this belief or that belief. You have to write the  way you see things. I tell people, Make a list of ten things you hate  and tear them down in a short story or poem. Make a list of ten things  you love and celebrate them. When I wrote Fahrenheit 451 I hated book burners and I loved libraries. So there you are. 
 INTERVIEWER
 After you’ve made your list of nouns, where do you go from there? 
 BRADBURY
 I begin to write little pensées  about the nouns. It’s prose poetry. It’s evocative. It tries to be  metaphorical. Saint-John Perse published several huge volumes of this  type of poetry on beautiful paper with lovely type. His books of poetry  had titles like Rains, Snows, Winds, Seamarks.  I could never afford to buy his books because they must have cost  twenty or thirty dollars—and this was about fifty years ago. But he  influenced me because I read him in the bookstore and I started to write  short, descriptive paragraphs, two hundred words each, and in them I  began to examine my nouns. Then I’d bring some characters on to talk  about that noun and that place, and all of a sudden I had a story going.  I used to do the same thing with photographs that I’d rip out of glossy  magazines. I’d take the photographs and I’d write little prose poems  about them.
 Certain pictures evoke in me things from my  past. When I look at the paintings of Edward Hopper, it does this. He  did those wonderful townscapes of empty cafes, empty theaters at  midnight with maybe one person there. The sense of isolation and  loneliness is fantastic. I’d look at those landscapes and I’d fill them  with my imagination. I still have all those pensées. This was the beginning of bringing out what was me.  
 INTERVIEWER
 Can you cite an example of a pensée in your own work? 
 BRADBURY
 The description of the foghorn in the short  story “The Fog Horn.” The paragraph describing the dinosaur in “A Sound  of Thunder.” Those are good examples. 
 INTERVIEWER
 Why do you think you prefer short stories  to novels? Is it an issue of patience? They call it attention-deficit  hyperactivity disorder these days. 
 BRADBURY
 I think there’s some truth to that. Turn a  liability into an asset. My attention is not there. So, I write what I  can write: short stories. 
 INTERVIEWER
 If your first draft, as you often say, is  primarily your subconscious speaking to the page, do you intellectualize  in the rewriting stages? 
 BRADBURY
 Sure. I go through and cut. Most short stories are too long. When I wrote the novel Something Wicked This Way Comes,  the first draft was a hundred and fifty thousand words. So I went  through and cut out fifty thousand. It’s important to get out of your  own way. Clean the kindling away, the rubbish. Make it clear. 
 INTERVIEWER
 You are a fast writer. Are you a fast editor? 
 BRADBURY
 No. I type my first draft quickly,  impulsively even. A few days later I retype the whole thing and my  subconscious, as I retype, gives me new words. Maybe it’ll take retyping  it many times until it is done. Sometimes it takes very little  revision. 
 INTERVIEWER
 What time of day do you do most of your writing? 
 BRADBURY
 I write all the time. I get up every  morning not knowing what I’m going to do. I usually have a perception  around dawn when I wake up. I have what I call the theater of morning  inside my head, all these voices talking to me. When they come up with a  good metaphor, then I jump out of bed and trap them before they’re  gone. That’s the whole secret: to do things that excite you. Also, I  always have taken naps. That way, I have two mornings! 
 INTERVIEWER
 Do you write outlines?
 BRADBURY
 No, never. You can’t do that. It’s just  like you can’t plot tomorrow or next year or ten years from now. When  you plot books you take all the energy and vitality out. There’s no  blood. You have to live it from day to day and let your characters do  things.
 INTERVIEWER
 Do you ever go back and reread your books and short stories?
 BRADBURY
 Every so often, late at night, I come  downstairs, open one of my books, read a paragraph and say, My God. I  sit there and cry because I feel that I’m not responsible for any of  this. It’s from God. And I’m so grateful, so, so grateful. The best  description of my career as a writer is “at play in the fields of the  Lord.” It’s been wonderful fun and I’ll be damned where any of it came  from. I’ve been fortunate. Very fortunate.
 INTERVIEWER
 I suppose it’s unnecessary to ask whether you enjoy writing.
 BRADBURY
 It’s obvious that I do. It’s the exquisite  joy and madness of my life, and I don’t understand writers who have to  work at it. I like to play. I’m interested in having fun with ideas,  throwing them up in the air like confetti and then running under them.  If I had to work at it I would give it up. I don’t like working.
 INTERVIEWER
 You mentioned the stroke you suffered in 1999. What do you remember about that experience?
 BRADBURY
 I was out at my house in Palm Springs  working on a short story. I was walking around the house and all of a  sudden I felt unstable. I couldn’t walk very well or talk very well. I  called my wife—she was back at our home in Los Angeles—and she sent my  driver out to get me. When he arrived I said, I want to go home, and he  said, No, no. I’m taking you right to the hospital. So he saved my life.  He took me to the Eisenhower Medical Center near Palm Springs and they  ran tests and they saw that I was in a lousy condition. My leg was  paralyzed, my arm was paralyzed, I found it difficult to speak.
 I knew it was severe because I couldn’t  move. I’d lie in bed and say to my leg, OK, move—and it wouldn’t. It was  like a dead dog. Roll over, dead dog, roll over. And does your hand  move? No. So after a period of weeks, finally, slowly, slowly, I got a  finger to move, I got a toe to move. I thought I’d never get through the  first month, but I did. And finally my leg began to come alive. God has  been good to me. I’ve been given great genes and the whole experience  was good for me because I’ve taken off all this weight. My blood sugar  is normal now—I don’t have to take medicines for that. My blood pressure  is normal again after many years. I did all this to myself—I have no  one else to blame. Lots of beer, lots of wine, overweight by seventy  pounds, and it was time to take it off.
 INTERVIEWER
 You never recovered the motor skills to type again. How have you been able to write?
 BRADBURY
 Just a few days after my stroke I called my  daughter Alexandra, who works for me as my assistant, and told her to  come to the hospital. I told her to bring the manuscript I was working  on, my mystery novel Let’s All Kill Constance. I dictated the  story to her and she typed it up. And that’s the way I have written  since. I call her on the phone, dictate my stories to her, and she types  them up and faxes them to me. Then I edit with a pen. It’s not an ideal  process, but what the hell.
 INTERVIEWER
 Has this change in the physical act of writing altered your prose?
 BRADBURY
 Not much. If you look at the new collection  of stories that I’m working on right now, “Juggernaut,” the stories are  pretty damned strong. I’d love to use my typewriter again. I miss it  terribly, but it’s just not possible. So I get by.
 INTERVIEWER
 How important has your sense of optimism been to your career?
 BRADBURY
 I don’t believe in optimism. I believe in  optimal behavior. That’s a different thing. If you behave every day of  your life to the top of your genetics, what can you do? Test it. Find  out. You don’t know—you haven’t done it yet. You must live life at the  top of your voice! At the top of your lungs shout and listen to the  echoes. I learned a lesson years ago. I had some wonderful Swedish  meatballs at my mother’s table with my dad and my brother and when I  finished I pushed back from the table and said, God! That was beautiful.  And my brother said, No, it was good. See the difference?
 Action is hope. At the end of each day,  when you’ve done your work, you lie there and think, Well, I’ll be  damned, I did this today. It doesn’t matter how good it is, or how  bad—you did it. At the end of the week you’ll have a certain amount of  accumulation. At the end of a year, you look back and say, I’ll be  damned, it’s been a good year.
 INTERVIEWER
 What do you think of e-books and Amazon’s Kindle?
 BRADBURY
 Those aren’t books. You can’t hold a  computer in your hand like you can a book. A computer does not smell.  There are two perfumes to a book. If a book is new, it smells great.  If a book is old, it smells even better. It smells like ancient Egypt. A  book has got to smell. You have to hold it in your hands and pray to  it. You put it in your pocket and you walk with it. And it stays with  you forever. But the computer doesn’t do that for you. I’m sorry.
 INTERVIEWER
 With the publication of Fahrenheit 451, you were hailed as a visionary. What would you warn us about today?
 BRADBURY
 Our education system has gone to hell. It’s  my idea from now on to stop spending money educating children who are  sixteen years old. We should put all that money down into kindergarten.  Young children have to be taught how to read and write. If children went  into the first grade knowing how to read and write, we’d be set for the  future, wouldn’t we? We must not let them go into the fourth and fifth  grades not knowing how to read. So we must put out books with  educational pictures, or use comics to teach children how to read. When I  was five years old, my aunt gave me a copy of a book of wonderful fairy  tales called Once Upon a Time, and the first fairy tale in the  book is “Beauty and the Beast.” That one story taught me how to read  and write because I looked at the picture of that beautiful beast, but I  so desperately wanted to read about him too. By the time I was six  years old, I had learned how to read and write.
 We should forget about teaching children  mathematics. They’re not going to use it ever in their lives. Give them  simple arithmetic—one plus one is two, and how to divide, and how to  subtract. Those are simple things that can be taught quickly. But no  mathematics because they are never going to use it, never in their  lives, unless they are going to be scientists, and then they can simply  learn it later. My brother, for example, didn’t do well in school, but  when he was in his twenties, he needed a job with the Bureau of Power  and Light. He got a book about mathematics and electricity and he read  it and educated himself and got the job. If you are bright, you will  learn how to educate yourself with mathematics if you need it. But the  average child never will. So it must be reading and writing. Those are  the important things. And by the time children are six, they are  completely educated and then they can educate themselves. The library  will be the place where they grow up.
 INTERVIEWER
 You were married for fifty-six years before  your wife passed away in 2003. What was the secret to the longevity of  your relationship?
 BRADBURY
 If you don’t have a sense of humor, you don’t have a marriage. In that film Love Story,  there’s a line, “Love means never having to say you’re sorry.” That’s  the dumbest thing I ever heard. Love means saying you’re sorry every day  for some little thing or other. You make a mistake. I forgot the  lightbulbs. I didn’t bring this from the store and I’m sorry. You know?  So being able to accept responsibility, but above all having a sense of  humor, so that anything that happens can have its amusing side.
 INTERVIEWER
 The week after your wife passed away, you got back to writing. How were you able to do that?
 BRADBURY
 Work is the only answer. I have three rules  to live by. One, get your work done. If that doesn’t work, shut up and  drink your gin. And when all else fails, run like hell!
 INTERVIEWER
 Which of your recent stories are you particularly proud of?
 BRADBURY
 One of my very favorite stories from any  era of my career is “The Toynbee Convector.” It’s about a man who  convinces the world that he has invented a time machine and that he has  seen the future, and that if we don’t change things, the world will go  to hell. Of course, it’s all a lie, but people believe him. In many  ways, that man in that story is me, warning people about the future.
 INTERVIEWER
 When you look back over your career, is there one moment that stands out as having been particularly exhilarating?
 BRADBURY
 The first really great thrill was when I  was twenty. I submitted a short story, “It’s Not the Heat, It’s the  Hu—,” to Rob Wagner’s Script magazine. One day in August I got a  letter from Wagner saying that it was a lovely story and that they  would publish it immediately. I yelled and my mother came running down  to the front yard and I showed her the letter. I was twenty years old,  and we danced around the yard. They didn’t pay me anything, but they did  send copies of the magazine so I could show it to all my friends and  prove that I was a writer. That first sale is so important. The  psychological effect of it lasts for a year! Maybe you’re not going to  sell anything else for a year, but my God, you did it once.
 INTERVIEWER
 Do you write for an ideal reader or a particular audience?
 BRADBURY
 Every time you write for anyone, regardless  of who they are, no matter how right the cause you may believe in, you  lie. Steinbeck is one of the few writers out of the thirties who’s still  read, because he didn’t write for causes at all. He wrote human stories  that happened to represent causes indirectly. The Grapes of Wrath and his other books are not political treatises. Fahrenheit 451 is in a way a political treatise, but it isn’t, because all it is saying, emotionally, is: Everyone leave everyone else alone!
 INTERVIEWER
 Does literature, then, have any social obligation?
 BRADBURY
 Not a direct one. It has to be through  reflection, through indirection. Nikos Kazantzakis says, “Live forever.”  That’s his social obligation. The Saviors of God celebrates  life in the world. Any great work does that for you. All of Dickens says  live life at the top of your energy. Edgar Rice Burroughs never would  have looked upon himself as a social mover and shaker with social  obligations. But as it turns out—and I love to say it because it upsets  everyone terribly—Burroughs is probably the most influential writer in  the entire history of the world.
 INTERVIEWER
 Why do you think that?
 BRADBURY
 By giving romance and adventure to a whole  generation of boys, Burroughs caused them to go out and decide to become  special. That’s what we have to do for everyone, give the gift of life  with our books. Say to a girl or boy at age ten, Hey, life is fun! Grow  tall! I’ve talked to more biochemists and more astronomers and  technologists in various fields, who, when they were ten years old, fell  in love with John Carter and Tarzan and decided to become something  romantic. Burroughs put us on the moon. All the technologists read  Burroughs. I was once at Caltech with a whole bunch of scientists and  they all admitted it. Two leading astronomers—one from Cornell, the  other from Caltech—came out and said, Yeah, that’s why we became  astronomers. We wanted to see Mars more closely.
 I find this in most fields. The need for  romance is constant, and again, it’s pooh-poohed by intellectuals. As a  result they’re going to stunt their kids. You can’t kill a dream. Social  obligation has to come from living with some sense of style, high  adventure, and romance. It’s like my friend Mr. Electrico.
 INTERVIEWER
 That’s the character who makes a brief appearance in Something Wicked This Way Comes,  right? And you’ve often spoken of a real-life Mr. Electrico, though no  scholar has ever been able to confirm his existence. The story has taken  on a kind of mythic stature—the director of the Center for Ray Bradbury  Studies calls the search for Mr. Electrico the “Holy Grail” of Bradbury  scholarship.
 BRADBURY
 Yes, but he was a real man. That  was his real name. Circuses and carnivals were always passing through  Illinois during my childhood and I was in love with their mystery. One  autumn weekend in 1932, when I was twelve years old, the Dill Brothers  Combined Shows came to town. One of the performers was Mr. Electrico. He  sat in an electric chair. A stagehand pulled a switch and he was  charged with fifty thousand volts of pure electricity. Lightning flashed  in his eyes and his hair stood on end.
 The next day, I had to go the funeral of  one of my favorite uncles. Driving back from the graveyard with my  family, I looked down the hill toward the shoreline of Lake Michigan and  I saw the tents and the flags of the carnival and I said to my father,  Stop the car. He said, What do you mean? And I said, I have to get out.  My father was furious with me. He expected me to stay with the family to  mourn, but I got out of the car anyway and I ran down the hill toward  the carnival.
 It didn’t occur to me at the time, but I  was running away from death, wasn’t I? I was running toward life. And  there was Mr. Electrico sitting on the platform out in front of the  carnival and I didn’t know what to say. I was scared of making a fool of  myself. I had a magic trick in my pocket, one of those little  ball-and-vase tricks—a little container that had a ball in it that you  make disappear and reappear—and I got that out and asked, Can you show  me how to do this? It was the right thing to do. It made a contact. He  knew he was talking to a young magician. He took it, showed me how to do  it, gave it back to me, then he looked at my face and said, Would you  like to meet those people in that tent over there? Those strange people?  And I said, Yes sir, I would. So he led me over there and he hit the  tent with his cane and said, Clean up your language! Clean up your  language! He took me in, and the first person I met was the illustrated  man. Isn’t that wonderful? The Illustrated Man! He called  himself the tattooed man, but I changed his name later for my book. I  also met the strong man, the fat lady, the trapeze people, the dwarf,  and the skeleton. They all became characters.
 Mr. Electrico was a beautiful man, see,  because he knew that he had a little weird kid there who was twelve  years old and wanted lots of things. We walked along the shore of Lake  Michigan and he treated me like a grown-up. I talked my big philosophies  and he talked his little ones. Then we went out and sat on the dunes  near the lake and all of a sudden he leaned over and said, I’m glad  you’re back in my life. I said, What do you mean? I don’t know you. He  said, You were my best friend outside of Paris in 1918. You were wounded  in the Ardennes and you died in my arms there. I’m glad you’re back in  the world. You have a different face, a different name, but the soul  shining out of your face is the same as my friend. Welcome back.
 Now why did he say that? Explain that to  me, why? Maybe he had a dead son, maybe he had no sons, maybe he was  lonely, maybe he was an ironical jokester. Who knows? It could be that  he saw the intensity with which I live. Every once in a while at a book  signing I see young boys and girls who are so full of fire that it  shines out of their face and you pay more attention to that. Maybe  that’s what attracted him.
 When I left the carnival that day I stood  by the carousel and I watched the horses running around and around to  the music of “Beautiful Ohio,” and I cried. Tears streamed down my  cheeks. I knew something important had happened to me that day because  of Mr. Electrico. I felt changed. He gave me importance, immortality, a  mystical gift. My life was turned around completely. It makes me cold  all over to think about it, but I went home and within days I started to  write. I’ve never stopped.
 Seventy-seven years ago, and I’ve  remembered it perfectly. I went back and saw him that night. He sat in  the chair with his sword, they pulled the switch, and his hair stood up.  He reached out with his sword and touched everyone in the front row,  boys and girls, men and women, with the electricity that sizzled from  the sword. When he came to me, he touched me on the brow, and on the  nose, and on the chin, and he said to me, in a whisper, “Live  forever.” And I decided to.
