In this new episode of the
Bradbury 100 podcast, I explore
Futuria Fantasia - the
fanzine that Ray Bradbury produced when he was a teenage science
fiction fan.
The first issue of Futuria Fantasia, published when
Ray was eighteen years old, catches him just before he heads off to New
York for the first-ever World Science Fiction Convention. In that first
issue, he is very much focused on "Technocracy", a movement which
promised to turn science fiction into political reality. The issue includes an essay on Technocracy by Bruce Yerke, followed by an early piece of Ray Bradbury science fiction: "Don't Get Technatal", a satirical look at how boring it will be to live in a utopia!
"Don't Get Technatal" was Ray's third piece of published fiction, although he hid behind the pseudonym of Ron Reynolds. I read it in full in the podcast, along with Ray's other contributions to FuFa No. 1. (I also read selections from the writings of the other contributors.)
If you want to read the whole magazine, it's freely available, since the copyright on FuFa expired decades ago. The best place to find it - and the other three issues that Ray published - is via the links at science fiction history site FANAC.
So, come with me now to the world of 1939, where fans of "scientifiction" enthusiastically support the bright future offered by the Technocracy movement, perhaps oblivious to the impending likelihood of world war...
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