Ray Bradbury's “To the Future” published in the May 13, 1950, issue of Collier’s. I read it in 1974, when I was 12, in The Illustrated Man (1951) where it appears as “The Fox and the Forest”. Actually it was "El zorro y el bosque" en "El Hombre Ilustrado", since I'm Argentine... We used it for Spanish class, to identify verbs, nouns, adjectives, etc., and some other exercises. To me, it was the doorway into science-fiction. I never left...
Ray Bradbury's “To the Future” published in the May 13, 1950, issue of Collier’s.
I read it in 1974, when I was 12, in The Illustrated Man (1951) where it appears as “The Fox and the Forest”.
Actually it was "El zorro y el bosque" en "El Hombre Ilustrado", since I'm Argentine...
We used it for Spanish class, to identify verbs, nouns, adjectives, etc., and some other exercises.
To me, it was the doorway into science-fiction.
I never left...
A nice version of the story I read so many years ago.
People in the 50s would of course remember the 40s.
If Melton had burned out three kidneys he'd be dead.
Yes, both he and possibly the other person from whom he borrowed the third kidney.
Two hundred years in the future, and they still think Columbus discovered America 😮 still, a wonderful story. Ty🎉
Overall, a very good story and production, but the woman's overly melodramatic acting is a bit annoying. Just sayin'.......