2007
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American writer
Ray Douglas Bradbury is an American writer known for his dystopia 451 degrees Fahrenheit, his short story The Martian Chronicles, and his partly autobiographical novel Dandelion Wine.
Bradbury has produced more than eight hundred literary works, including several novels and novellas, hundreds of short stories, dozens of plays, and a number of articles, notes, and poems.
Bradbury is traditionally considered a classic of science fiction, although much of his work gravitates toward the fantasy genre.
Bradbury's plays were well received by audiences, but his poems were not very successful. Bradbury's main achievement is that he was able to arouse readers' interest in the genres of science fiction and fantasy, which before him had been on the margins of modern culture
American writer
August 11, 1949
1925
1922
1918
American writer and journalist
Margaret Manerlin Mitchell November 8, 1900 American author and journalist, author of Gone with the Wind.
Gone with the Wind, published in 1936, won the National Book Award for most outstanding novel of 1936 and the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1937, with more than 70 editions in the United States and translated into 37 languages. The 1939 film of the same name, directed by Victor Fleming, won eight Academy Awards.
American writer and journalist
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American writer
Stephen Edwin King is an American writer working in a variety of genres, including horror, thriller, fantasy, fantasy, mystery, drama, and detective, nicknamed the "King of Horror. More than 350 million copies of his books have been sold, and many feature films and TV series, television productions, and comic strips have been made from them. King has published 60 novels, including seven under the pen name Richard Bachman, and five popular science books.
He wrote about 200 short stories, most of which were collected in nine author's collections. Many of King's works are set in his native Maine.
Father of Stephen King