Bradbury uses free-association to begin his stories where he simply types a word and goes from there, his passion and love for his work comes through his pages. He also encourages writers to find their own voice through practice, and to write until grammar and story structure become unconscious. The book is a non-fiction novel based on reference work from the authors life experiences. Figures of speech are used throughout the authors writing, using tropes to figuratively give examples to his scheme in his writing to give his readers a better understanding about his experiences and writing tips. His style of writing creates the creativity and the “zen” in writing, and by offering techniques to his readers by his own personal experiences. The overall tone of the book is the passion and love for his writing. Bradbury’s style and tones purpose used in his book is to connect with his readers, by addressing what he has learned through his passionate career of writing and offer suggestions to his readers. Bradbury’s form complements his message by him leading into his message, explaining it, giving his experience and backing, then offer his suggestions to his readers. By using this form, aids his intentions by giving his readers his experiences suggesting writing tips his readers can see all the points of his …show more content…
The author alludes to events in history and through his personal experiences, to provide as a reference point of what he has already experienced and learned throughout his career. Bradbury produced disturbing, yet beautiful tales, that is full of errors in logic, which is sometimes unclear the meaning, because of this it reflects the twentieth and early twenty-first century social and cultural history Bradbury’s novel continues to warn new generations of readers and thinkers. The echoes of Bradbury’s personal experiences of now a vanished Century that he once belonged to, along with the cultural inheritance and the historical environment that formed his art, which continues to become part of our personal experience, our cultural inheritance, our historical