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125 pages 4 hours read

Ray Bradbury

The Martian Chronicles

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1950

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“August 2001: The Settlers”Chapter Summaries & Analyses

“August 2001: The Settlers” Summary

The first wave of settlers leaves Earth hearing positive feedback from the successful Fourth Expedition. The motivations vary according to each person, but they are common in their desire to leave Earth and their pasts behind. Once they leave Earth, however, and witness the planet shrink away to become a “muddy baseball tossed away” (96), they are besieged with loneliness and uncertainty. They are The Lonely Ones, who must “stand by themselves” (96).

“August 2001: The Settlers” Analysis

For the settlers, the reality of their decision to travel to Mars sinks in when they are suspended between planets. Mars, for them, had been an abstract of hope, a way to flee whatever they felt persecuted by on Earth. Their motivations are varied, expectations undefined; Mars is the idealistic destination, a blank slate those who are willing to discard their lives. After leaving Earth, the settlers are forced to confront the smallness of their lives cast against the vastness of space. When they watch the Earth shrink to the size of a “muddy baseball” (96), they become infused with a loneliness the forces them to examine their convictions. Bradbury hints at their primary coping mechanism with the image of a muddy baseball to describe the Earth, evoking a nostalgia of youthful days.

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