Dark Carnival (short story collection) explained

Dark Carnival
Author:Ray Bradbury
Cover Artist:George Burrows (photo montage)
Country:United States
Language:English
Publisher:Arkham House
Release Date:1947
Media Type:Print (hardback)
Pages:313

Dark Carnival is a short story collection by American writer Ray Bradbury, first published October 1947 by Arkham House.[1] It was his debut book, and many of the stories were reprinted elsewhere.

Contents

  1. "The Homecoming"
  2. "Skeleton"
  3. "The Jar"
  4. "The Lake"
  5. "The Maiden"
  6. "The Tombstone"
  7. "The Smiling People"
  8. "The Emissary"
  9. "The Traveler"
  10. "The Small Assassin"
  11. "The Crowd"
  12. "Reunion"
  13. "The Handler"
  14. "The Coffin"
  15. "Interim"
  16. "Jack-in-the-Box"
  17. "The Scythe"
  18. "Let's Play 'Poison'"
  19. "Uncle Einar"
  20. "The Wind"
  21. "The Night"
  22. "There Was An Old Woman"
  23. "The Dead Man"
  24. "The Man Upstairs"
  25. "The Night Sets"
  26. "Cistern"
  27. "The Next In Line"

About the stories

Dark Carnival was Bradbury's first published book. 3,112 copies were printed by Arkham House, under the editorial direction of August Derleth. All but six of the stories had been first published elsewhere, although Bradbury revised some of the texts.

Fifteen of the 27 stories were reprinted in The October Country in 1955, some in revised form. Those stories are "The Next in Line", "Skeleton", "The Jar", "The Lake", "The Emissary", "The Small Assassin", "The Crowd", "Jack-in-the-Box", "The Scythe", "Uncle Einar", "The Wind", "The Man Upstairs", "There Was an Old Woman", "The Cistern" and "The Homecoming".

Of the remainder, eight have been reprinted in one or more collections.

"The Night Sets", "The Maiden", "Reunion" and "Interim" have not been anthologized as of 2010.

For many years, Bradbury did not permit Dark Carnival to be reprinted, since updated versions of many of the stories were collected as The October Country. However, a limited edition of Dark Carnival, with five extra stories and a new introduction by Bradbury, was printed by Gauntlet Press in 2001.

On August 22, 2006, "The Homecoming" was published as a stand-alone short story with illustrations by Dave McKean.

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ray Bradbury . 2024-06-10 . www.arts.gov . en.