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The Martian Chronicles
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length288 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAvon Books
- Publication dateFebruary 1, 1997
- Dimensions5.12 x 0.97 x 7.25 inches
- ISBN-100380973839
- ISBN-13978-0380973835
There is a special edition available for this item:
The chilling story of the abduction of two teenagers, their escape, and the dark secrets that, years later, bring them back to the scene of the crime. | Learn more
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“A prescient, lyrical writer with an abiding hatred for intolerance, Bradbury influenced generations of readers and many of our most famous dreamers, from Stephen King to Steven Spielberg.” - Junot Diaz
“How I passed so much of my life without devouring everything Ray Bradbury has ever read is beyond me...on the bright side, how fortunate I am to experience all this for the first time! My God.” - R. F. Kuang
“What has this man from Illinois done that episodes from the conquest of another planet leave me in terror and loneliness, I question, as I close the pages of his book. . . .In this book of phantasmagoric experiences, Bradbury has put his empty Sundays, his American boredom, his loneliness, just like Sinclair Lewis did in Main Street.” - Jorge Luis Borges
“The Martian Chronicles was the first science fiction book to make me feel a character's righteous rage... and the first science fiction book to make me feel loss and loneliness in my gut, doing it without featuring a single human, save as a shadow on a wall... The Martian Chronicles, in short showed me what words can truly do. It showed me magic.” - John Scalzi
“Mars in his hands...is not a place described with scientific accuracy or even much consistency, but a state of mind…. Space ships are not miracles of technology, but psychic conveyances, serving the same purpose as Dorothy's whirlwind-borne house in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, or the trance of the traditional shaman: they get you to the Otherworld.” - Margaret Atwood
From the Back Cover
Man, was a a distant shore, and the men spread upon it in wave... Each wave different, and each wave stronger.
The Martian Chronicles
Ray Bradbury is a storyteller without peer, a poet of the possible, and, indisputably, one of America's most beloved authors. In a much celebrated literary career that has spanned six decades, he has produced an astonishing body of work: unforgettable novels, including Fahrenheit 451 and Something Wicked This Way Comes; essays, theatrical works, screenplays and teleplays; The Illustrated Mein, Dandelion Wine, The October Country, and numerous other superb short story collections. But of all the dazzling stars in the vast Bradbury universe, none shines more luminous than these masterful chronicles of Earth's settlement of the fourth world from the sun.
Bradbury's Mars is a place of hope, dreams and metaphor-of crystal pillars and fossil seas-where a fine dust settles on the great, empty cities of a silently destroyed civilization. It is here the invaders have come to despoil and commercialize, to grow and to learn -first a trickle, then a torrent, rushing from a world with no future toward a promise of tomorrow. The Earthman conquers Mars ... and then is conquered by it, lulled by dangerous lies of comfort and familiarity, and enchanted by the lingering glamour of an ancient, mysterious native race.
Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles is a classic work of twentieth-century literature whose extraordinary power and imagination remain undimmed by time's passage. In connected, chronological stories, a true grandmaster once again enthralls, delights and challenges us with his vision and his heart-starkly and stunningly exposing in brilliant spacelight our strength, our weakness, our folly, and our poignant humanity on a strange and breathtaking world where humanity does not belong.
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.
Product details
- Publisher : Avon Books
- Publication date : February 1, 1997
- Edition : Subsequent
- Language : English
- Print length : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0380973839
- ISBN-13 : 978-0380973835
- Item Weight : 12 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.12 x 0.97 x 7.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,381,730 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

Ray Douglas Bradbury was an American author and screenwriter. One of the most celebrated 20th- and 21st-century American writers, he worked in a variety of genres including fantasy, science fiction, horror, and mystery fiction

In a career spanning more than seventy years, Ray Bradbury, who died on June 5, 2012, at the age of 91, 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, teleplays, 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. He wrote the screen play for John Huston's classic film adaptation of Moby Dick, and was nominated for an Academy Award. He adapted sixty-five of his stories for television's The Ray Bradbury Theater, and won an Emmy for his teleplay of The Halloween Tree. 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.
Throughout his life, Bradbury liked to recount the story of meeting a carnival magician, Mr. Electrico, in 1932. At the end of his performance Electrico reached out to the twelve-year-old Bradbury, touched the boy with his sword, and commanded, "Live forever!" Bradbury later said, "I decided that was the greatest idea I had ever heard. I started writing every day. I never stopped."

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The book beneath is beautiful
Top reviews from the United States
- 5 out of 5 stars
Great Story
Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2026This is a classic. Bradbury was a pioneer of science fiction along with Asimov, Clark and some others. Not as clinical as Asimov, who was a physicist, but a good story teller. I think this is his best work.
Sending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 4 out of 5 stars
a book ultimately concerned with the ambivalent nature of man
Reviewed in the United States on July 17, 2015I think I first read The Martian Chronicles in junior high. Around then, I’d read anything by Bradbury I could get my hands on. I was always rather grateful he’s so prolific. And I remember really liking The Martian Chronicles, but when I picked up a copy a couple of months ago I found I didn’t really remember anything concrete about it. Just that I liked it.
On rereading it, I’ve found I still really like it, though probably not for the same reasons I did back when I was twelve or so. It’s a book ultimately concerned with the ambivalent nature of man -- a deep-seated greediness married to a gentler, more altruistic side -- and the cyclical nature of change. It traces the settlement of Mars by humans, which results in the accidental genocide of the native Martians via chickenpox and the humans’ attempts to change Mars into a place more comfortable to them. They plant trees to increase the oxygen level in the planet’s atmosphere (a move which, though not directly addressed in the book, strikes me as the sort of thing that would have disastrous downstream consequences) and build towns that look just like the ones they left. Some even build hot dog stands. But when atomic war breaks out on Earth, the settlers go rushing back*, leaving a few isolated, lonely souls behind and Mars virtually uninhabited. The book ends with small clutches of escapees from Earth** touching down illicitly to start a new life there. They declare themselves Martians, and the cycle seems to start over again.
That’s about as close to a plot as the book has. I think it’s technically considered a novel, but really it’s a collection of inter-related short stories. There are a handful of characters that make multiple appearances -- most notably, members of the Fourth Expedition to Mars, the first to survive landing there in no small part due to the fact that one of the previous three expeditions wiped out the Martians with chicken pox -- but this is not a character-driven book. Really, Bradbury’s focus seems to be on capturing the way life on Mars shifts as the humans take over the planet. And the flexibility of the book’s structure allows him to do that with a wider, more varied lens than he would’ve had if he’d tried to do it using a more traditionally novel-like framework. By making each chapter a discrete episode in an era, he’s able to explore many different reactions to Mars and many different ways of living there.
The structure of the book, actually, is one of the few things I did remember about the book from the way back junior high times. And I’ve always been intrigued by it. It makes sense with Bradbury -- he’s a master of the short story. Through the interconnected short stories, The Martian Chronicles is able to give you a sense of what it would be like to live there at any point in the long process of settling, and gives you an understanding of the long process itself.
The other thing that sticks with me is the tone. In story after story, Bradbury writes in simple, almost quaint language, but does so in a way that communicates to the reader his trepidation and distaste with the frontier mindset of the settlers. In each individual story, it’s a quiet, subtle thing, like a warning he’s sending out that he doesn’t really believe will be heeded. A subtext lurking in the background. But over the course of the 27 stories, you get the message loud and clear. But the tone, I think, is at its strongest and most powerful in “The Musicians”:
Behind him would race six others, and the first boy there would be the Musician, playing the white xylophone bones beneath the black flake covering. A great skull would roll to view, like a snowball; they shouted! Ribs, like spider legs, plangent as a dull harp, and then the black flakes of mortality blowing all about them in their scuffling dance; the boys pushed and heaved and fell in the leaves, in the death that had turned the dead to flakes and dryness, into a game played by boys whose stomachs gurgled with orange pop.
That sense of innocent, thoughtless disrespect for the lives of people and civilizations that came before resonates through Bradbury’s writing in story after story. Sometimes, like in “The Musicians”, this is the focus of the story. But as often as not, it isn’t, it just lurks in the background, coloring how the stories fit together.
*This was about the only thing I found unbelievable about the book. I found it improbable that people would flee a safe planet to one in the throes of nuclear war rather than the other way around. I also wonder how feasible that is -- I mean, if s***’s blowing up all over, where are those rockets supposed to land again? But one gaping plot hole in a book this good I can overlook.
**This last story, “The Million-Year Picnic,” kept reminding me of that episode of the Twilight Zone where a pair of families escape an impending world war by building rockets and striking out for a peaceful, livable planet in the dead of night. Of course in the episode, that peaceful, livable planet is....EARTH! So it’s inverted, I guess, here. But still, same sense of tension and the same basic plot points.
35 people found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 5 out of 5 stars
Not the most unique alien race, but a haunting, memorable, and relevant collection. Enthusiastically recommended
Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2009Written as a number of short stories that build a coherent arc, The Martian Chronicles is the story of mankind's repeated attempts to colonize Mars. Before man, Mars is populated by a psychic race that is in some ways surprising similar to Earth's western civilizations, a suburban utopia of housewives, gardens, and jobs, but with more complex and ancient arts, histories, and literature. Earth's initially missions are all failures, but eventually the Martian race is wiped out and humans colonize the planet, destroying the old beauty that the Martians leave behind. When Earth begins to collapse in nuclear war, Mars is abandoned, left to a few stragglers and some new immigrants. The whole of the work is varied, and each chapter/short story is different: some expository, some humorous, some scientific, some bittersweet, some about Martians, some about humans. There is something haunting and memorable about the text, the last chapters specifically, and while The Martian Chronicles is not my favorite sci-fi work or even my favorite book about an alien race (that would be Asimov's The God's Themselves), it is classic Bradbury: surreal yet suburban, science-fiction but relevant, ironic, enjoyable, bittersweet, and all in all a good book. I recommend it.
It is hard to discuss or summarize The Martian Chronicles because of the amount of variety from chapter to chapter in the text. Each chapter reads like an independent short story and could even stand alone. However, as a whole the text does build a definitive arc, creating a final product that is greater than the sum of its parts. As a result of this build up, the last chapters are definitely the best of the bunch--they are the ones that will stick with the reader and carry the most impact. They are also the most depressing, surreal, and haunting of the bunch--haunting is a world that I'll use a lot because it really is the best descriptor of the final effect of this book. While early sections are funny and some later sections truly ironic and cynical, the book ends with the remnants of an abandoned planet, creating a story of remorse, memories, and, in the very end, the possibility of hope. The Martian ghost town is an image that sticks with you. It's magical, unreal, and, yes, haunting.
The Martian Chronicles is classic Bradbury in its relevance, however--while the book may end with an abandoned foreign planet, every event implies a lesson and every lesson can be carried over to our domestic culture on earth. Bradbury teaches cynicism, the ignorance and foolishness of humans, our weakness, our hubris (and with it our downfall), the fragility of all people on all planets, and, somehow, ultimately, the human/sentient ability to persevere. It may be about Mars, but this is a very human book. While taking the reader to a foreign landscape, Bradbury ultimately reminds him of his own backyard.
There is a lot of good sci-fi out there, and there are better (more original, more unique) examples of alien races, but Bradbury's Martian Chronicles is still worth reading. It's easy to get into and addicting, a very interesting concept, delightfully ironic, a little bit religious, very spiritual, bittersweet and hopeful. I enjoy this book and have read it a few times myself. I recommend it to others, although there is other sci-fi worth reading too. Pick this one up if the idea interests you or if you like Bradbury's other books.
14 people found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 5 out of 5 stars
Good, GREAT, EXCELLENT!!! FAVORITE BOOK! Highly Recommend!
Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2025I just bought another Ray Bradbury book I already own! Owning two versions of THIS book is an easy YES! Since I've read this book at least 10-times, and I've earned my personal Highest Honors BA in English Lit., I feel zero need to over analyze TMC because my days of in-depth lit analysis are over!
Ray Bradbury did write Sci Fi. Bradbury also wrote speculative fiction, and he was always asking himself: What If? This collections of short stories tells an overall story that continues Bradbury's endless quest to find another What If topics that will potentially lead to his next novel idea for a novel.
The Martian Chronicles is meant to transport the reader to Mars, and I've lived on Mars many times thanks to Bradbury's innovative writing style that never fails to take me from Earth straight into alien territory. It's been over two or three-decades since I've visited Mars, so I'm eager to get back. I'm confident nothing has changed.
**Our arrival on Mars, is challenging. The first missions are a bit confusion and somewhat hard to understand, at first. As our missions fail, we meet friendly new friends who are also somewhat confused, and they struggle to understand. Fear not, Reader! Hang in there!
Bradbury purposely obfuscates of our very alien arrival with friendly natives uncertain reception. The seemingly loosely connected short stories come together to tell a very cohesive story. My first read of TMC was at 13-yo, and I promptly fell in LOVE with Ray Bradbury's EVERYTHING! Here I am 40-years later, still buying multiple copies of books I own IRL just because I want digital versions, too! Read on, my fellow book readers! Word up!
10 people found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 5 out of 5 stars
Fantastic! A book for the To Be Re-Read pile!
Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2016"Named but unnamed, and borrowing from humans everything but humanity."
Ray Bradbury's classic, The Martian Chronicles, is a collection of Mars stories written by the author over the course of a few years that he compiled and threaded together (wonderfully, I might add) in this beautiful piece of fiction.
The stories take us to Mars and its inhabitants. Their chameleon-like species that wears our look and copies our perceived actions, but often times lacks our free will, inhibitions, and fiery emotions. This begs the question: Is our humanity our best and worst asset?
There's so many great stories to be found in these ages, too many for me to go through. I'll just point to a few of my favorites:
Ylla- A Martian's romantic dream of a fascinating man from New York named Nathaniel York arriving in a rocket ship. This one was a highlight for me. LOVED it!
The Earth Men- Another expedition to Mars delivers three astronauts to the red planet and finds them unable to elicit excitement of their arrival to any of the planets inhabitants. We eventually find out why they receive such a ho-hum welcome and it is fantastic.
The Martian- The story of a Martian who makes himself look like the departed loved ones of anyone he comes in the vicinity of...he longs to be loved and accepted. Unfortunately, his costumes bring too much attention.
And the Moon Be Still as Bright- A man named Spender sees the shape of things to come. How our humanity that has led to wars and the downfall of Earth will eventually bring the same to this beautiful, untapped planet. One of my favorites!
Usher II- This one is for the horror lover in us all. When humans finally bring their rules and regulations, their awful government and unwarranted censorships to the red planet , one man and his sidekick strike back in entertaining and apropos fashion. LOVED IT! Horror fans will eat this one up.
The Martian Chronicles is a fun and inventive read and a wonderful trip through the imagination of one of the best in the business.
I give it 5 Stars!
2 people found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 3 out of 5 stars
Charming and whimsical, but oh so dated
Reviewed in the United States on March 18, 2013I'd heard virtually my entire life that THE MARTIAN CHRONICLES was a great book. After a buildup like that, it's not surprising that I was disappointed. I was expecting a novel, but it's really a lot of vignettes that are loosely related in that they take place on Mars in the early 21st Century. Time has not been kind to THE MARTIAN CHRONICLES. It may have seemed fresh and original when it was written, but after hundreds of viewings of The Twilight Zone episodes, most of it looks pretty hackneyed today. There is more than a little whimsy and a considerable amount of preaching. What may have seemed like cutting edge technology in the 1950s is laughably clunky today. (Watches still tick on 21st Century Mars.) The setting may be the Twenty-first Century Mars, but the sensibilities are 1950s American. These characters never experienced the sexual revolution, womens' liberation, the civil rights movement, or 9/11. They seem so naïve, like Howdy Doody and Jack Paar. It has a certain charm, and one of the episodes, about the last man on the planet meeting the last woman on the planet, I found truly hilarious. Nostalgia fans will probably like it more than science fiction fans. Three stars.
5 people found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 4 out of 5 stars
Amazing book! No so great shipping
Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2026I LOVE this book so much so I just HAD to get the anniversary edition!!
Only reason I give it four stars is because the bottom left corner of the book came slightly damaged!
Sending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 5 out of 5 stars
Decades old, and just as meaningful and enjoyable now
Reviewed in the United States on November 29, 2021I first read this in 8th grade (over 50 years ago), and it shocked me. To that point my science fiction reading was all spaceships, ray guns, bug-eyed evil aliens, and obvious 'good guys'. Bradbury writes true literature, and often has the voice of a poet. There is some talk of rockets, but no scenes occur on the rocket in space; they are mere means to get people from a known Earth, to the unknowns of another planet. No ray guns either, though the ancient Martians have interesting weapons. The ancient Martians are mirrors of us; both good and bad - but more what we wish we could be. There are a few true "good guys" and some "bad guys" as well, but most characters are just regular people who do their best. At its basic level, it is a story of humanity's good parts, bad parts, foibles, and strengths, and how people respond to the unknown and novel situations.
My original copy of Chronicles has long since yellowed out and its pages have fallen apart. While this version annoyingly has advanced the dates well into the 21st century (decades later than Bradbury's original - Why? I don't find Jules Verne or unreadable because it happened over a century ago.), it doesn't drop out chapters and sections that carry offensive, racist, terms. Many modern versions of Chronicles have wrongly removed such chapters, fearing modern readers to be incapable of understanding why offensive language and ideas are important to display, because that is how we learn how indefensible such world views truly are.
This book was written 75+ years ago, so don't expect any high tech discussions - no computers or androids, no warp speeds or all-seeing sensors. We now have rovers on Mars, and we know there are no magical crystal cities once populated by amazing Martians. We know we can't walk on the planet without spacesuits. But what we now know, in no way, detracts from the stories (understand that this is not a novel, but a collection of stories that run in chronological order) and their power to hold a mirror to humankind. At its best, science fiction explores humanity by placing it in situations well-beyond what we have on Earth. And Bradbury's Martian Chronicles is a great example of science fiction at its best.
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Top reviews from other countries
Raúl5 out of 5 starsGran historia
Reviewed in Mexico on August 2, 2025Excelente libro, muy entretenido y de lectura ligera. El tipo de papel es el que no te lastima para nada la vista y el tamaño de letra es adecuado. 10/10
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Diana A.5 out of 5 starsPerfect condition
Reviewed in Italy on December 25, 2025Arrived quickly and in perfect condition. Very happy with my purchase!
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Jezabel Jones5 out of 5 starsA wonder !
Reviewed in France on January 21, 2019I love this book ! It's dreamy and scary and makes our travel !
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Steven Riley5 out of 5 starsLyrical and evocative
Reviewed in Australia on April 25, 2025This is not hard science fiction: no technical explanations of space travel, planetary astrophysics, etc. This is a mixture of fantasy; lyrical, almost poetic descriptions; penetrative character studies. Some of the chapters / stories follow unexpected paths: prepare to be surprised. Themes? - take your pick: historical determinism, difficulties of communication between cultures, the emotional darkness than can overcome and distort. Above all, beautifully written.
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WS5 out of 5 starsHighly recommended
Reviewed in India on February 1, 2018The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury is an interconnected thread of short stories written in the form of a novel. Though it is categorised as Science fiction, having dealt with space travel, telepathy, high-end technologies, alien encounter, it is more than just that!
After it's release in 1950, when Aldous Huxley read this book, he insisted Bradbury that this book is more poetic than Sci-fi. And that's what most of the readers who read it felt, including me. Such an astounding and magnificent read it is!
.
Each of the short stories has depicted well about human's attempt to colonize the red planet, Mars. A few expeditions failed, while some did succeed which in turn lead to other mishaps. Bradbury brilliantly describes human tendency of wanting to gain power and dominate the other race, written in a strange and poetic manner. The writing is so whimsical that it makes you question over human existence... Spellbinding! ✨
The whole point of the novel sums up in these quotes ⤵
"We earth men have a talent for ruining big, beautiful things."
“Science ran too far ahead of us too quickly, and the people got lost in a mechanical wilderness, like children making over pretty things, gadgets, helicopters, rockets; emphasizing the wrong items, emphasizing machines instead of how to run the machines. Wars got bigger and bigger and finally killed Earth. That!”
"They'll be flopping their filthy atom bombs here, fighting for bases to have wars. Isn't it enough that they ruined one planet without ruining another?
Do they have to foul someone else's manger? Simple minded windbags!"
I enjoyed this novel much more than his Fahrenheit 451 and I'm looking forward to read more of his works. Highly recommend this novel to all of you who are reading this!
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