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Ray Bradbury

Ray Bradbury. Bradbury’s work is full of childhood imaginings, fantasies, and nightmares – portraits of Venus and Mars, time travel, ageless children, never-ending rains – but Bradbury the grown-up is a concerned citizen.

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Ray Bradbury

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  1. Ray Bradbury • Bradbury’s work is full of childhood imaginings, fantasies, and nightmares – portraits of Venus and Mars, time travel, ageless children, never-ending rains – but Bradbury the grown-up is a concerned citizen. • His fantasy stories are often warnings against blind faith in science, but they’re optimistic. By giving strange twists to everyday objects and events, Bradbury challenges his readers to look at them as if for the first time. As a writer he lets readers see science through the excited years of children, but he also informs, suggesting ways to use technology more responsibly.

  2. Genre • A genre is a category or type of literature, such as fiction or poetry. Identifying the genre of a selection helps a reader to establish expectations for the work. • As you read “All Summer in a Day,” notice the clues that reveal the common elements of science fiction.

  3. Science Fiction Science fiction is defined loosely as fiction that deals with the impact of science and technology on the world. Sometimes the technology is real, sometimes it is entirely imagined, and sometimes it has been imagined by an author and then brought to reality by scientists. Science fiction themes often warn of the potential for disaster when technology is abused.

  4. Vocabulary Terms • Concussion – Violent shaking • Slackening – Easing; becoming less active • Vital – Necessary to life; critically important • Surged – Moved in a violent swelling motion • Tumultuously – Noisely and violently • Resilient – Springing back into shape • Savored - Enjoyed

  5. Tasks: • Read Page 287: Literary Focus and Reading Strategy. • Read the Following Questions on Pages 295 & 296: • Check Your Comprehension (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) • Critical Thinking (1, 3, 5, 6) • Reading Strategy (1, 2) • Literary Focus (1, 2, 3, 4). • Flip through pages 289 – 294 looking at the illustrations. • Read Ray Bradbury’s “All Summer in a Day.” • Answer the above questions with complete sentences in which you flip the question.

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