Venus Remembered

Ray Bradbury, Jason J. Marchi, William F. Nolan


4.00 · 1 ratings · Published: 08 Nov 2020

Venus Remembered by Ray Bradbury, Jason J. Marchi, William F. Nolan
NINE YEAR OLD Margot remembers the sun. "[A] yellow crayon or a coin large enough to buy the world with . . . a warmness, like a blushing in the face, in the body, in the arms and legs and trembling hands."

In Ray Bradbury's revered short story, "All Summer in a Day," the last time Margot saw the sun was when she was four years old and still living on Earth. After her family moved to Venus a year later, she longed to see the sun again and to feel its warmth on her skin.

On the one day every seven years when it stops raining on Venus and the sun breaks through the perpetual cloud cover to brighten the landscape for a brief two hours, Margot is locked away in a dark closet by her jealous classmates.
Readers familiar with the graceful and poetic writing of Ray Bradbury – and those new to his literary magic – will find themselves empathetic toward a young girl who is kept from feeling and seeing the sunlight by her mean-spirited peers.
Jump forward in time and meet Margot at 16. In the story "When the Rain Stops," Jason Marchi provides one plausible and satisfying answer to the question left in readers' minds at the end of Bradbury's classic tale of aloneness – whatever happened to Margot?

Appearing together for the first time in a single book, a classic short story by one of America’s most beloved writers and an inspired sequel story by a young writer. Ray Bradbury’s “All Summer in a Day,” which first appear in the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1954, became the basis from which Jason Marchi wrote a sequel story 40 years later.
• Since its original publication, “All Summer in a Day” has been reprinted in over 75 anthologies. Marchi’s sequel, “When the Rain Stops,” was first published in Verbicide magazine in 2002.
• Foreword by William F. Nolan, co-author of Logan’s Run, one of the most seminal novels in the annals of science fiction.
• Introduction by Dr. Jonathan R. Eller, Director of the Center for Ray Bradbury Studies at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI).
• Discussions section for creative writing students.
• Bonus letter from Bradbury to Marchi in March of 2002.

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