![]() This lends creedence and impact to the NUMEROUS allusions Bradbury makes to Plato's "Allegory of the Cave" however, in the Simon and Schuster printings (and the censored Ballantine printings) the term is changed to "cafes" putting teens in the center of society and destroying the allusion. In the reset Ballantine Clarrisse talks about people hanging out in caves and listening to joke boxes and seeing TV screens. One of which is the variant of "caves" and "cafes". I'm working of stuff for F451 right now, being a Graduate school Geek, and am finding some interesting changes that are still out there dispite the resetting in 1978. ![]() It's a textual and creative analysis of Bradbury's writings it goes through some of the major books and all. I thought this was a dreary subject for a Ray Bradbury program, and it seemed like something was missing in the telling. But instead, Martin got his wish that Dog would come back home NOW. Yeah a lot of Bradbury's stories seemed to have been slightly revised between publishings-ok, maybe not a lot, I'm not too sure haven't finished reading but it is interesting: With Dog going missing for a day or two and then suddenly reappearing, I was fearing the worst, namely that Martin had gone over to the other side himself. ![]()
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