From the Dust Returned

From the Dust Returned

by Ray Bradbury
From the Dust Returned

From the Dust Returned

by Ray Bradbury

Paperback(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)
$8.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Ray Bradbury, America's most beloved storyteller, has spent a lifetime carrying readers to exhilarating and dangerous places, from dark street comers in unfamiliar cities and towns to the edge of the universe. Now, in an extraordinary flight of the imagination a half-century in the making, he takes us to a most wondrous destination: into the heart of an Eternal Family.

They have lived for centuries in a house of legend and mystery in upper Illinois — and they are not like other midwesterners. Rarely encountered in daylight hours, their children are curious and wild; their old ones have survived since before the Sphinx first sank its paws deep in Egyptian sands. And some sleep in beds with lids.

Now the house is being readied in anticipation of the gala homecoming that will gather together the farflung branches of this odd and remarkable family. In the past-midnight stillness can be detected the soft fluttering of Uncle Einars wings. From her realm of sleep, Cecy, the fairest and most special daughter, can feel the approach of many a welcome being — shapeshifter, telepath, somnambulist, vampire — as she flies high in the consciousness of bird and bat.

But in the midst of eager anticipation, a sense of doom pervades. For the world is changing. And death, no stranger, will always shadow this most singular family: Father, arisen from the Earth; Mother, who never sleeps but dreams; A Thousand Times Great Grandmére; Grandfather, who keeps the wildness of youth between his ears.

And the boy who, more than anyone, carries the burden of time on his shoulders: Timothy, the sad and different foundling son who must share it all, remember, and tell...and who, alone out of all of them, must one day age and wither and die.

By turns lyrical, wistful, poignant, and chilling, From the Dust Returned is the long-awaited new novel by the peerless Ray Bradbury — a book that will surely be numbered among his most enduring masterworks.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780380789610
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 09/03/2002
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 288
Sales rank: 270,759
Product dimensions: 4.18(w) x 6.74(h) x 0.78(d)

About the Author

About The Author
In a career spanning more than seventy years, Ray Bradbury inspired generations of readers to dream, think, and create. A prolific author of hundreds of short stories and close to fifty books, as well as numerous poems, essays, operas, plays, and screenplays, Bradbury was one of the most celebrated writers of our time. His groundbreaking works include Fahrenheit 451, The Martian Chronicles, The Illustrated Man, Dandelion Wine, and Something Wicked This Way Comes. An Emmy Award winner for his teleplay The Halloween Tree and an Academy Award nominee, he was the recipient of the 2000 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, the 2004 National Medal of Arts, and the 2007 Pulitzer Prize Special Citation, among many honors.

Hometown:

Los Angeles, California

Date of Birth:

August 22, 1920

Place of Birth:

Waukegan, Illinois

Education:

Attended schools in Waukegan, Illinois, and Los Angeles, California

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

The Town and the Place

At first, A Thousand Times Great Grandmère said, there was only a place on the long plain of grass and a hill on which was nothing at all but more grass and a tree that was as crooked as a fork of black lightning on which nothing grew until the town came and the House arrived.

We all know how a town can gather need by need until suddenly its heart starts up and circulates the people to their destinations. But how, you ask, does a house arrive?

The fact is that the tree was there and a lumberman passing to the Far West leaned against it, and guessed it to be before Jesus sawed wood and shaved planks in his father's yard or Pontius Pilate washed his palms. The tree, some said, beckoned the House out of tumults of weather and excursions of Time. Once the House was there, with its cellar roots deep in Chinese tombyards, it was of such a magnificence, echoing facades last seen in London, that wagons, intending to cross the river, hesitated with their families gazing up and decided if this empty place was good enough for a papal palace, a royal monument, or a queen's abode, there hardly seemed a reason to leave. So the wagons stopped, the horses were watered, and when the families looked, they found their shoes as well as their souls had sprouted roots. So stunned were they by the House up there by the lightning-shaped tree, that they feared if they left the House would follow in their dreams and spoil all the waiting places ahead.

So the House arrived first and its arrival was the stuff offurther legends, myths, or drunken nonsense.

It seems there was a wind that rose over the plains bringing with it a gentle rain that turned into a storm that funneled a hurricane of great strength. Between midnight and dawn, this portmanteau-storm lifted any moveable object between the fort towns of Indiana and Ohio, stripped the forests in upper Illinois, and arrived over the as-yet-unborn site, settled, and with the level hand of an unseen god deposited, shakeboard by shakeboard and shingle by shingle, an arousal of timber that shaped itself long before sunrise as something dreamed of by Rameses but finished by Napoleon fled from dreaming Egypt.

There were enough beams within to roof St. Peter's and enough windows to sun-blind a bird migration. There was a porch skirted all around with enough space to rock a celebration of relatives and boarders. Inside the windows loomed a cluster, a hive, a maze of rooms, sufficient to a roster, a squad, a battalion of as yet unborn legions, but haunted by the promise of their coming.

The House, then, was finished and capped before the stars dissolved into light and it stood alone on its promontory for many years, somehow failing to summon its future children. There must be a mouse in every warren, a cricket on every hearth, smoke in the multitudinous chimneys, and creatures, almost human, icing every bed. Then: mad dogs in yards, live gargoyles on roofs. All waited for some immense thunderclap of the long departed storm to shout: Begin!

And, finally, many long years later, it did.

From the Dust Returned. Copyright © by Ray Bradbury. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Reading Group Guide

Summary
One of Ray Bradbury's most precious childhood memories is of Halloweens spent at his grandparents' home with his beloved Aunt Neva, only ten years older than he. It was she who instilled in him his lifelong love of this most magical of holidays. Many of the characters from that long ago time have been given a life - and after-life - of their own, in Bradbury's eagerly anticipated new book From the Dust Returned.

The story is set in the family home in an area of Illinois that Bradbury refers to as the "October Country." Bradbury's descriptions of the house - with its multitude of rooms and ninety-nine or one hundred chimneys - conjure an image of the ultimate haunted mansion.

The main residents are Father, who must sleep during daylight hours; Mother, who doesn't sleep at all; A Thousand Times Great Grandmère, whose "life" spans more than four thousand years back to ancient Egypt; daughter Cecy, who sleeps day and night in order to dream-travel her way into all manner of living beings; and an adopted son, Timothy, who is clearly not like the others. The family anticipates a "Homecoming," the visitation of dozens of aunts, uncles and cousins in their various forms. There's Uncle Einar, larger than life with his huge green wings; the four cousins, all in love with and in need of Cecy; John the Unjust, who proves to be the family's undoing; and a host of other unforgettable characters.

The family must decide who they are, why they exist, and what they represent. Ultimately, they heed Great Grandmère's prophetic warnings, and disperse, scattering to the winds in order to survive before they are set upon by a mob of fearful townspeople.

Richly allegorical, From the Dust Returned explores family relationships and universal, time-tested themes of love, belonging, sense of place, and the meaning of life and death.

Topics for Discussion
  • With a family "history" that spans more than 4,000 years, the passage of time has a far different meaning to Elliott family members than it might have for us. How much time might have passed from the beginning of the story, when Cecy goes off in search of love, to Tom's return at the end? What do you think Bradbury is saying about our relationship to time and space?

  • Cecy declares, "If I can't be in love … because I'm odd, then I'll be in love through someone else." [p.22] Discuss this line of thinking and what the author might be saying about vicarious experience in contemporary society.

  • Her parents warn that Cecy might be "diminished" should she marry "a mere earth-bound creature," yet she appears to be ready to do so. [p. 32] If you had Cecy's ability to experience the world through others' eyes, would you consider it a gift or a liability? Explain.

  • Upon discovering the abandoned baby, Father insists, "He is not like us." Mother replies, "No, but still." Make an argument for both sides: Should the Family keep the baby or not? Had the Dark Lady not intervened, who do you think would have prevailed? Why?

  • Cecy "visits" a lonely farmer's wife by a salt sea, near the mud pots [p. 60] and tells Timothy that she intends to stay "until I've listened and looked and felt enough to change her life." Yet, as she departs, now in the form of a bird, she sees the woman sinking in a pool of mud - indeed a life-changing event. Under what circumstances can death be an acceptable alternative to life? Was this scene one such circumstance?

  • Discuss the story of the ghastly passenger on the Orient Express. Do you agree with his characterization of Americans as doubters, the French as cynics, and the English as the only believers? [pp. 95-96] Why would he have felt equally assaulted by atheists as well as true believers? "Poisonous talk and delirious chatter" cause the passenger to wilt. How does modern technology contribute to our own deterioration?

  • Nostrum Paracelsius Crook insists that the Family define themselves for the first time [p. 111], yet their process is interrupted by the ghastly passenger seeking refuge, who says, "Ask not for whom the funeral bell tolls . . .." Discuss the Family's decision in the context of meeting individual personal needs versus an obligation to assist others.

  • Father provides Timothy a history of "the rising tide of disbelief," saying, "So Christians and Muslims confront a world torn by many wars to finalize yet a larger." He then poses the question, "Does the unholy or holy win?" [p. 117] Discuss your reaction to Father's explanation, especially in light of recent world events. Knowing that some of the stories in this book were originally written more than fifty years ago, when do you suppose that Bradbury wrote this particular passage?

  • In Chapter 15, Uncle Einar resigns himself to marriage, once he can no longer travel in the manner to which he has become accustomed. He changes his diet and sleeping habits; his wife, in turn, makes him more comfortable. Do you believe that the secret to a successful marriage is this kind of give-and-take? Should spouses change to meet the needs of each other?

  • From Angelina Marguerite, Timothy learns the lesson, "Make haste to live." [Chapter 18] If you found yourself growing ever younger, as did Angelina, would you be as likely to "make haste to live" as you might if the reverse were true, and you were rapidly aging? Instead of "ashes to ashes, dust to dust," could you embrace a philosophy of "angels and flowers?"

  • Great Grandmère has been both ignored and forgotten by "a Family eager for survival and forgetful of unremembered deaths' leftovers." [p. 174] Why is a family's history important? What can we do to preserve and record ours?

  • Ray Bradbury once said of his stories that they are warnings, not predictions. "If they were predictions I wouldn't do them, because then I'd be part of a doom-ridden psychology. Every time I name the problem, I try to give the solution." Spend some time talking about the problems Bradbury has identified in From the Dust Returned, and the solutions he presents as well.

    About the Author: Ray Bradbury first wrote about the Elliott family more than fifty years ago in "Homecoming," a short story that appeared in the October 1946 issue of Mademoiselle magazine. The story was illustrated by Charles Addams, creator of "The Addams Family," and Addams and Bradbury hoped to one day collaborate on an Elliott family book. Though his stories are closer to fantasy than science fiction - and closer to reality than fantasy - Bradbury is regarded as a giant of science fiction today. Among his many books are The Martian Chronicles, The Illustrated Man, Dandelion Wine, Something Wicked This Way Comes, The October Country, and Fahrenheit 451. He is the winner of numerous awards for his books and screenplays, and was Idea Consultant for the United States Pavilion at the 1964 World's Fair. He has also worked as a consultant on city engineering and rapid transit, and helped design several malls in California, where he currently resides. In November 2000, Bradbury was awarded the National Book Foundation's 2000 Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. He lives with his wife, Marguerite, in Los Angeles.

  • From the B&N Reads Blog

    Customer Reviews