Sci-fi author envisions future -- of library
Alex Coolman
COSTA MESA -- When famed science-fiction writer Ray Bradbury imagines a
library of the future, there is no doubt he thinks of gleaming computer
terminals, robotic reference desks and encyclopedias written in Martian
tongues.
But at a Wednesday night benefit held at the Costa Mesa Senior Center,
Bradbury was working to help create a library of the more immediate and
concrete future: one that could appear in only a few years rather than in
eons, and be used by local residents rather than the aliens and cyborgs
of fantasy writing.
Bradbury’s appearance was part of “Author! Author!,” a series of events
organized by The Costa Mesa Library Foundation, a group working to raise
money and awareness for a new city library.
The series kicked off last month with a reading by Laguna Beach novelist
T. Jefferson Parker, author of “Little Saigon” and “Laguna Heat.” Jo-Ann
Mapson, author of “The Wilder Sisters,” will appear for the final event
of the series on Nov. 17.
About 100 Bradbury fans crowded the Senior Center on Wednesday, a crowd
comprising both older book aficionados and enthusiasts from local high
schools. A line of giddy autograph-seekers -- many of them carrying
stacks of their dogeared copies of titles like “The Martian Chronicles”
and “Fahrenheit 451” -- began to form before Bradbury began speaking.
In his extemporaneous remarks, the silver-haired, delightfully disheveled
author shared a few tales from his long career as a writer of short
stories, novels and movies.
He described the moment the gruff director John Huston cornered him in a
hotel room and asked him to write the screenplay for the 1956 film
version of the book “Moby Dick.”
“I said, ‘Gee, Mr. Huston, I’ve never been able to read the damn thing,”’
Bradbury recalled.
The foundation hopes to eventually create a 70,000-square-foot library
that would give readers reason to stay and browse through the collection,
take advantage of the computer center or check out the options of a
resource center.
In order to create such a building, the foundation needs to raise about
$15 million. Only about $4,000 of that total is expected to come from the
series of readings, but foundation president Sandy Genis characterized
the fund-raiser as an important first step in stimulating community
interest in the project.
“We’re not going to build a library on a series of author readings,”
Genis said. “But it does hopefully raise the public awareness of what
we’re trying to do.”
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