Texarkana Gazette

Trove of Bradbury’s papers set for preservati­on

- By Rick Callahan

INDIANAPOL­IS—Ray Bradbury won over generation­s of readers to science fiction with “Fahrenheit 451” and other works during a writing career that spanned much of the 20th Century and produced a mountain of manuscript­s, correspond­ence and memorabili­a.

That sprawling collection, much of which Bradbury’s family donated after his death in 2012 at age 91, is now entering a long-running preservati­on project at its home on the campus of Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapol­is.

The Center for Ray Bradbury Studies, which is devoted to the study of the science fiction-fantasy author’s works, won a $50,000 grant this month from the National Endowment for the Humanities to begin planning the giant archive’s conservati­on.

“This is a national treasure and we have the great, good fortune to be able to preserve his legacy here for years to come,” said Jonathan Eller, who befriended Bradbury in the 1980s and directs the center, which he co-founded in 2007.

Although Bradbury wrote his most famous titles in the mid-20th century, including “Fahrenheit 451,” a novel about a dystopian future in which “firemen” hunt down and burn books to keep society in a state of ignorance, Eller said many of his works remain relevant because of their warnings about the misuse of technology and the importance of safeguardi­ng the human imaginatio­n.

“He stands as much as any author for freedom of the imaginatio­n. With ‘Fahrenheit 451,’ which was written when there was a climate of fear in America and McCarthyis­m, and other works, he’s still synonymous with freedom of the imaginatio­n,” he said.

Bradbury’s major works, including “The Martian Chronicles” and “The Illustrate­d Man,” remain in print and HBO will next month air a version of “Fahrenheit” starring Michael Shannon, Michael B. Jordan and Sofia Boutella.

Meanwhile, the Bradbury center, which is near downtown Indianapol­is and features a replica of the basement office in Los Angeles where the author wrote for decades, is preparing to delve into the collection he left behind for what’s expected to be a yearslong preservati­on effort.

It won’t be an easy task: The collection weighs nearly 30,000 pounds and includes unpublishe­d works, 120,000 pages of his typescript­s and other documents as well as photos and memorabili­a. There’s also about 30,000 pages of Bradbury’s incoming correspond­ence, including letters from astronauts and astronomer­s who were fans of his space-age tales, and some 1,600 rare pulp magazines such as “Amazing Stories.”

Eller said it will take years and more funding to sort, categorize, stabilize and digitize the contents, including brittle documents that dried out in Southern California’s arid climate.

Bradbury was born in Waukegan, Illinois, in 1920, but his family moved to Los Angeles in 1934 during the height of the Great Depression. His first short story was published when he was 18, and he rose to literary fame in 1950 with “The Martian Chronicles.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ A vast trove of manuscript­s, memorabili­a and correspond­ence, including fan letters astronauts and scientists wrote to science fiction-fantasy writer Ray Bradbury, is heading into a years-long project to preserve Bradbury's artistic legacy.
Associated Press ■ A vast trove of manuscript­s, memorabili­a and correspond­ence, including fan letters astronauts and scientists wrote to science fiction-fantasy writer Ray Bradbury, is heading into a years-long project to preserve Bradbury's artistic legacy.

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