Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Ray Bradbury: "A Bed for Maria" and "The Long After Midnight Girl"

At Beaver Creek Antiques in Hagerstown I spotted a quite damaged copy of the fourth and final issue of Eros with a price tag of $2.00.  Eros, I later learned online, was a hardcover periodical published from Spring to Winter of 1962, a sort of literary (you might say pretentious) sex magazine offering such hi-brow erotic material as a translation of Lysistrata with charming illustrations by Australian artist Norman Lindsay, a photo essay about the erotic sculptures at the Konark Sun Temple, and a condensation of Fanny Hill along with such sensational and up-to-date fare as a pictorial of Marilyn Monroe and an essay by Dr. Albert Ellis urging people to enter into plural marriages.

Safe-for-work details of representative images from Eros

You can check out all four issues of Eros at this page of a website dedicated to its short-lived publisher; at the same website are scans of another of that publisher's magazines, Avant Garde, which also serves up healthy doses of more or less high-minded sex-themed art, though Avant Garde's main purpose seems to be to run down American society.  Even if you aren't all that interested in sex and don't think America is all that bad, you may find Avant Garde worth a look because of its modern design aesthetic; also, the issue dated Summer 1971(the summer I was born!) features an ad for the Science Fiction Book Club I haven't seen before.  

I bring Eros up not only to alert you to a source of artistically credible depictions of young women's bodies, but because within Eros's pages are to be found two stories by the universally beloved Ray Bradbury.  Eros is not listed at isfdb, so these appearances may have escaped the notice of some SF fans.  Let's read the Eros printings of these tales and talk about them below.

"A Bed for Maria"

"A Bed for Maria" appears in the second issue of Eros, along with the photo essay "We All Love Jack," which consists of like two dozen pictures of women making googly eyes at John F. Kennedy, and an article by Arthur Herzog which is apparently about how Native Americans of the Southwest are less uptight about sex than white people.  (I assume this is the same Arthur Herzog who penned Make Us Happy, a SF novel that I read as a teenager and which features, if memory serves, a Sex Olympics in which competitors wrestle, each trying to make the other orgasm first.) 

Promoted as a "short, short story," "A Bed for Maria" takes up one page in Eros.  A guy owns a bed that has been in his family for centuries, an elaborately decorated thing with a headboard covered in carved musical instruments and beasts.  The springs are creaky and the mattress lumpy, but he claims that the bed is molded to his own form and thus supremely comfortable.  His wife of two years disagrees; she even seems to blame the bed for their childlessness!  On the very same day that he orders a new bed, his wife finds out she is pregnant, and everybody is happy and the wife begins to fall in love with the bed herself.

A sweet little trifle, perhaps a romanticization of family traditions.  "A Bed for Maria" apparently first appeared in the 1959 collection A Medicine for Melancholy under the title "The Marriage Mender."  The people at Eros seem to have introduced some typos to the text.  Tsk, tsk. 

"The Long After Midnight Girl" 

Among the features of the the final issue of Eros are an article on the topic of whether Shakespeare was gay, a "photographic tone poem on the subject of interracial love," and Ray Bradbury's "The Long After Midnight Girl," which, if isfdb is to be believed, was not reprinted until 1976 when there appeared a collection named after the story's new title, "Long After Midnight."

Three employees of the police department collect the body of a suicide hanging from a tree over the ocean.  The three men are saddened by this tragedy, and speculate on why this teenaged girl killed herself, theorizing that some callous man broke her heart and this triggered her self-destruction.  On closer examination, they realize that the dead body in their ambulance is not that of a young woman, but of a skinny man disguised as a woman.  The guy most upset over the death, the rookie, wonders aloud if this revelation should make them feel better or worse.

An interesting little story about what you might call sexism, the way people respond differently to events depending on the sex of those involved and have different expectations of the behavior of the different sexes.  I like it.


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Minor stories, but good; Bradbury delivers again.

4 comments:

  1. Interesting finds, at those Hagerstown and Frederick antique stores. I keep telling myself I should pull off of I-81 and investigate them, one of these days.........but then, there often is slow, congested traffic on I-81 through Hagerstown, all the way south down past Martinsburg, people driving crazy, and I say 'hell with it !' and keep on going...........

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    1. One of my many regrets about leaving Manhattan is the need to spend hour after hour in the car, but the two Wonder Book locations nearby, and Antiques Crossroads and Beaver Creek Antiques, where there are so many 20th-century SF and comics bargains, are the silver lining to living out here in the country.

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  2. You've found two Bradbury stories I've yet to read MPorcius, both of which sound intriguing. Regarding Norman Lindsay, I live 15 minutes away from the Norman Lindsay Gallery, in the Blue Mountains just west of Sydney - the Gallery is housed in his old home in the township of Faulconbridge. The house has a fine display of his prints and other art, the printing presses he and his wife used to publish his work while the grounds highlight statues sculpted based on his designs. And the cafe offers tasty meals in lovely bush setting. One of the many stories associated with Lindsay is that if he had insufficient money for his purchases at the local butcher, he would make up the difference by sketching the staff and surrounding landscapes on butcher's paper (if any survive they would be worth a tidy sum each). Lindsay also wrote and did the illustrations for the children's book "The Magic Pudding" (1918), which has never been out of print in Australia since first publication. If you ever visit Australia MPorcius, my wife and I would be very pleased to host you for lunch at the Gallery (our springtime is best, before the summer heat and threat of bushfires).

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    1. Wow, thanks for the great informative comment and the generous invitation! If we ever get down to Australia, I'll let you know!

      I am really impressed by Lindsay's drawings and watercolors--the compositions that suggest movement, the women's lush bodies and expressive faces, and the fun monsters, are compelling.

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