You know I love a book when I can’t help telling everyone I know to read it. In the past week, I’ve sent pictures of the cover of Ray Bradbury’s Dandelion Wine to no fewer than five people.
I first fell for Ray Bradbury’s work when I was a teenager, after my father recommended his most famous novel, Fahrenheit 451. A dystopian tale of firemen who carry out government-required book burnings, this book has become a classic for good reason. By contrast, Dandelion Wine is a far quieter masterpiece: a tale that follows a small town – and specifically two brothers – over the course of one summer in the 1920s. The book only tangentially explores Bradbury’s obsession with science and technology; instead, it spends time lingering on that potent time of life when a child is exploring and absorbing new information and knowledge, all the while navigating the emotional turmoil linked to, for example, a friend moving away. By jumping from head-to-head in a vignette style, however, Bradbury also broaches bigger issues, like feminicide and fear of change among both old and young.
The theme of a young boy coming of age is not an uncommon one, in literature. But Bradbury somehow manages to create a version of this trope that is tinged with just the right amount of magic and fantasy to help it stand out. At its core, Dandelion Wine isn’t just about coming of age; it’s about what it’s like to suddenly realize that you are alive.