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A Graveyard for Lunatics: Another Tale of Two Cities
 
 
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A Graveyard for Lunatics: Another Tale of Two Cities [Paperback]

Ray Bradbury
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 285 pages
  • Publisher: Bantam Dell Pub Group (Trd); Reprint edition (Jan 1992)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0553354779
  • ISBN-13: 978-0553354775
  • Product Dimensions: 20.8 x 13 x 1.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,179,631 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Ray Bradbury
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First Sentence
Once upon a time there were two cities within a city. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Mary Whipple HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Setting this novel during the glory days of Big Studio Hollywood, in which he himself was an earnest young screenwriter, Ray Bradbury sets out to create a murder mystery in which a twenty years-dead body is found on a ladder leaning against a wall between a graveyard and the movie studio next door. Over-the-top Hollywood characters and wannabes, "beasts" and monsters, and faux settings, such as Notre Dame, Calvary, and even the speaker's grandparents' house in Green Town, Illinois, fill this book with the illusions in which the film industry excels, while the machinations of ego-driven moguls provide motivations for murder.

No one should read this novel expecting a hard-boiled mystery, however. Bradbury's obvious love of people and of life itself is so heartfelt and overwhelming that it makes any sense of toughness unbelievable--and there are many other reasons to enjoy this book. Grounded by Midwestern values, fundamentally decent, and lacking the ego which seems to drive the rest of the industry, Bradbury shines in describing a mad Hollywood, "where great elephant ideas go to die. A graveyard for lunatics," where men so dedicate their lives to the creation of illusions that they often lose sight of reality. His wacky imagination flourishes, and it is clear that despite his sometimes flippant, tongue-in-cheek observations, his irony, and his criticism of Hollywood excess, that he loves the place and the exotic characters he meets there.

With imagery and descriptions that bring to life every aspect of studio activity, trenchant philosophical observations inserted casually (almost as throwaways), self-deprecating humor, and visions of plain folks challenging the studio bigwigs, Bradbury's mystery ambles toward an almost amiable conclusion. For the lover of Bradbury, this is another chance to share his visions and his enthusiasm for a life lived honestly. Most readers will undoubtedly share the feelings of Constance, who tells speaker/Bradbury, "How lucky to be inside your skin...Don't ever change. We stupid doomsayers, cynics, monsters laugh, but we need you. Otherwise, Merlin dies, or a carpenter fixing the Round Table saws it crooked, or the guy who oils the armor substitutes cat pee. Live forever. Promise?"
Mary Whipple

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Format:Paperback
This is the second in Bradbury's latter-day trilogy of murder-mysteries which began with 1985's 'Death Is A Lonely Business'. That book ostensibly told of a series of murders taking place in Venice, California in 1950, and the efforts of a young writer and his varous acquaintances, chiefly Detective Crumley and silent movie star Constance Rattigan, to unmask the killer. In typically deceptive Bradbury-esque fashion, however, the book is not what it seems. It is less a detective novel, rather an easy-going amble through a bunch of delightfully eccentric character vignettes and bizarre events that eventually manage to tie up.

This follow-up, set a few years later, follows much the same pattern, ablbeit a tad less successfully. The setting is a Hollywood studio and its neighbouring graveyard, where a replica of a long-dead movie mogul is hoisted on the wall one Halloween night. A mysteriously deformed character - the Beast - is on the prowl through the city streets, not to mention a host of backlot settings. It isn't long before a further series of notably strange secondary characters are dropping like flies. Once more our autobiographical young scribe investigates...

The book is as rambling and amiable as the first but it lacks the atmosphere this time around. After a twenty year hiatus from novel writing, Bradbury returned in the eighties with gusto, evoking the eerie canals and dying-on-its-feet community of Venice with macabre vividness. He created a dark sense of malaise that is absent in the sequel. Although he succeeds in creating alternate worlds on the studio backlot which accurately mirror his familiar theme of realities within realities, they don't grip as much as the rotting backwaters of Venice. His subsidiary characters - which include Jesus Christ no less - live and breathe in three dimensions, however, as the plot - which veers uncomfortably close to an episode of Scooby Doo upon occasion - unfolds. They sustain the book throughout its three hundred pages.

Bradbury's observations and philosophies are what really enliven this novel: they pepper the paragraphs with sparkle, wit, and not a little regret. Seventy at the time of writing, he remains a major creative force.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  10 reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Bradbury continues the magic, this time in Hollywood. 22 Feb 2002
By Mary Whipple - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Setting this novel during the glory days of Big Studio Hollywood, in which he himself was an earnest young screenwriter, Ray Bradbury sets out to create a murder mystery in which a twenty years-dead body is found on a ladder leaning against a wall between a graveyard and the movie studio next door. Over-the-top Hollywood characters and wannabes, "beasts" and monsters, and faux settings, such as Notre Dame, Calvary, and even the speaker's grandparents' house in Green Town, Illinois, fill this book with the illusions in which the film industry excels, while the machinations of ego-driven moguls provide motivations for murder.

No one should read this novel expecting a hard-boiled mystery, however. Bradbury's obvious love of people and of life itself is so heartfelt and overwhelming that it makes any sense of toughness unbelievable--and there are many other reasons to enjoy this book. Grounded by Midwestern values, fundamentally decent, and lacking the ego which seems to drive the rest of the industry, Bradbury shines in describing a mad Hollywood, "where great elephant ideas go to die. A graveyard for lunatics," where men so dedicate their lives to the creation of illusions that they often lose sight of reality. His wacky imagination flourishes, and it is clear that despite his sometimes flippant, tongue-in-cheek observations, his irony, and his criticism of Hollywood excess, that he loves the place and the exotic characters he meets there.

With imagery and descriptions that bring to life every aspect of studio activity, trenchant philosophical observations inserted casually (almost as throwaways), self-deprecating humor, and visions of plain folks challenging the studio bigwigs, Bradbury's mystery ambles toward an almost amiable conclusion. For the lover of Bradbury, this is another chance to share his visions and his enthusiasm for a life lived honestly. Most readers will undoubtedly share the feelings of Constance, who tells speaker/Bradbury, "How lucky to be inside your skin...Don't ever change. We stupid doomsayers, cynics, monsters laugh, but we need you. Otherwise, Merlin dies, or a carpenter fixing the Round Table saws it crooked, or the guy who oils the armor substitutes cat pee. Live forever. Promise?" Mary Whipple
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Fans of Hollywood History - Rejoice! 30 Jun 2000
By Suzanne DiRocco - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
WOW! From the moment I saw the cover winking at me in the Cal State Fullerton bookstore 12 years ago, this has been my favorite book af all time! Mr. Bradbury mixes up a concoction of murder, mystery, and the Golden Age of movies and studio heads to delight the reader. His character development and authenticity ring true to anyone who has ever seen a silent film or a great science fiction epic of the 1950's. I just can't say enough about this book! It is one of the few that I take the time to go back and read over and over again like a chance meeting of old, comfortable friends (and according to my grandfather, Herb Hinthorne, Mr. Bradbury used to be the kid in rollerskates all over Hollywood - he often skated into Henry's, an old restaurant on Hollywood Blvd. where my grandfather hung out with his waitress-mom, looking for the movie stars!). Get your hands on a copy of this book, and enjoy!
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Incomparable 25 Oct 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Another semi-autobiographical mystery written by Ray Bradbury, this sequel to "Death is a Lonely Business" is not only a superb work of fiction, it gives insights into Ray Bradbury's own life. This one centers around Bradbury's days as a screenwriter working with Ray Harryhausen. They look for the perfect monster for their new horror movie, but when they find it they stir up a coverup decades old. The description of a poor disfigured face is phenomenal. A highly recommend this book to any Bradbury fan.
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