Jesse’s Reviews > A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories > Status Update

Jesse
Jesse is on page 237 of 307
“Invisible Boy”

An old lady who wants to be a witch has her nephew-or-other Charlie visiting. To get him to stay around awhile longer, she plays a trick to get him to believe that she has turned invisible. What ensues is pretty much what happened in a Minecraft Milo and Chip video that my girls watched one day, except for the ending.
Feb 10, 2026 04:46PM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories

flag

Jesse’s Previous Updates

Jesse
Jesse is on page 306 of 307
“Icarus Montgolfier Wright”

This is nakedly a poetic parable about Man pushing the boundaries of science, in this case marching toward the invention of the space rocket that Bradbury dreamed so much about. Icarus and Daedalus, of course; Montgolfier I imagine was the inventor of the combustion engine; and the Wright brothers are notoriously American.
Feb 11, 2026 09:40AM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Jesse
Jesse is on page 303 of 307
“The Trolley”

A short cute story about the last trolley in the city. It’s going to be retired so that buses can take over all the public transportation, schools and otherwise. So the operator takes the kids on a joy ride to a lake where there used to be a sort of wooden fairground, they have a nice reminiscing picnic, and then he takes them all back.
Feb 11, 2026 08:21AM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Jesse
Jesse is on page 299 of 307
“Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed”

This is a Martian story that didn’t fall into The Martian Chronicles. The Bitterings, like the family from “Picnic”, come to earth to escape the war. Mr. Bittering is really attached to ol’ Gaea, and he clings hard to his earth man ways, but—just as with the family in “Picnic”—he becomes part of a new breed of Martians.
Feb 11, 2026 08:13AM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Jesse
Jesse is on page 284 of 307
“The Smile”

This post-apocalyptic world is the flip side to Bradbury’s stories about the direction of civilization. Life without civilization, or at least a recognizable one as featured in here, is miserable. Really, Bradbury’s illustrated civilization as a scapegoat for the evils of mankind. Destroying art and artifice can’t hope to redeem humanity. It isn’t the source.
Feb 11, 2026 07:55AM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Jesse
Jesse is on page 278 of 307
“The Screaming Woman”

Margaret Cleary is walking home with ice cream one day when she hears muffled screaming in an abandoned lot. She figures out that a woman has been buried alive and tries to free her but runs into pretty much every obstacle a child can reasonably meet in her quest in a very “adults patronizing children because they’re just kids” sort of FNAF energy.
Feb 11, 2026 07:39AM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Jesse
Jesse is on page 264 of 307
“The Million-Year Picnic”

The last story of The Martian Chronicles. Dad, Mom, and three boys have gone to Mars in a rocket. As far as the boys are concerned, it’s a picnic, but the oldest knows that something’s up. This is one of the more deeply American Bradbury stories as it taps into the same psyche that Doomsday preppers and survivalists have grown out of, a denial of the virtues of civilization.
Feb 11, 2026 06:40AM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Jesse
Jesse is on page 254 of 307
“Come Into My Cellar”

This is another “aliens are invading through unusual channels” except this time it’s through a fungus that’s ordered from the back of those magazines that young boys loved to send off from. You know: X-Ray Specs, voodoo dolls, fungi from yuggoth that control your brain after you eat it so that you can foster the invasion, the usual.
Feb 11, 2026 05:26AM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Jesse
Jesse is on page 228 of 307
“Hail and Farewell”

Bradbury writes about the magic of childhood, but this story explores a shadow side to the spell of youth: what if you were 12 years old forever? Willie manages to cope with it in his own way—he figures being a surrogate son is his job—but his own personal growth is just as stifled as his biological. “Are you happy? Are you as fine as you /seem/?”
Feb 10, 2026 04:23PM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Jesse
Jesse is on page 220 of 307
“The Pedestrian”

This is another prescient dystopian nightmare from Bradbury. A retired writer is arrested by what passes for the future police because he’s out walking at night instead of sitting down in the dark of a house with a television, just as the government intended for him. If you think that Bradbury is being sanctimonious then there’s just no helping you.
Feb 10, 2026 04:12PM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Jesse
Jesse is on page 215 of 307
“Time in Thy Flight”

A time traveler teacher has three children who he has study the HORRORS of childhood in 1928 Illinois. A circus! Fireworks at the Fourth of July! HALLOWEEN!! Ridiculous. The true horror is that only two of the three kids manage to escape the clinical psychosis of their overseer into a childhood fraught with the loves of Bradbury’s youth. The third… oh, that poor SOB…
Feb 10, 2026 04:05PM
A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories


Comments Showing 1-1 of 1 (1 new)

dateUp arrow    newest »

Jesse Bradbury’s saccharine sweetness is excellent when tempered with something sad, and that’s the image that he leaves us with after Charlie has “become visible” again.


back to top