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125 pages 4 hours read

Ray Bradbury

The Martian Chronicles

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1950

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“December 2005: The Silent Towns”Chapter Summaries & Analyses

“December 2005: The Silent Towns” Summary

A month after the human exodus back to Earth, much of Mars is completely abandoned, and empty human cities litter the planet’s surface. A man named Walter Gripp wanders the streets of one city while his eyes glow “with a dark, quiet look of loneliness” (194). His work as a prospector kept him away from the cities, and news of the Great War on Earth, and a week before he arrived deserted city. At first, he entertained himself luxuries, but very soon a loneliness strikes him. For years he has longed to marry “a quiet and intelligent woman” (194).

When a phone rings, Gripp becomes aware that he is not the only survivor on Mars. Unable to reach the phone before the caller hangs up, Gripp obsessively calls every woman in the phone book, desperate to believe that the caller was a potential partner. Eventually he reaches the caller, a woman named Genevieve Selsor who has a voice “so kind and sweet and fine” (200). Gripp sets off in quick pursuit of Genevieve, driving hundreds of miles before he finds her.

However, Genevieve does not match Gripp’s expectations. He considers her overweight and small-minded in her interests and grows annoyed with her almost immediately. Genevieve declares that she refused to go back to Earth with the others because they all picked on her and dictated how much she should eat and how her life should be lived, and Gripp doesn’t see her changing her views to suit his own. When Genevieve reveals that she is willing to marry Gripp, he flees the city. He decides on a life of loneliness, and never answers a ringing phone again.

“December 2005: The Silent Towns” Analysis

In the guise of a romantic comedy of errors, Bradbury asks the reader to consider the disparity between ideology and reality. The apparent comedy of Gripp’s disillusionment with Genevene is subverted by the story’s insistence upon the loneliness he feels. The suggestion is that he is willing to do anything to alleviate it, but when he is given the chance, he wholly rejects it. The limited perspective of Gripp’s third-person narration, however, belittles women, revealing him as having very limited interaction with them. He is more used to viewing them as ideals of his own mind rather than human beings with their own agency. This sharpens the theme of the story—while reinforcing Bradbury’s pessimism regarding human nature—that failure is certain when human beings pursue projected fantasies.      

The nature of idealizing is cast against the abandoned settlements on Mars, suggesting the same process led humans through their colonization, creating their idealized nostalgic villages, and importing the ideology of nostalgia—the dangerous notion of the perfection of the past, and the reachable goal it purportedly implies. Gripp’s disillusionment reveals how frail this practice is, and his decision to flee, rather than attempt to create a new human settlement, leaves the story pessimistic as to human nature in the face of an ideology not matching with reality.

Despite the derisive nature of Genevieve’s representation though Walter’s perspective, her motivation in staying on Mars aligns with several of the other outsiders in the collection. Much like Stendhal in “Usher II” she seeks to live her own authentic life according to her own values, which is the purported motivation behind most of the settlers on Mars. In this sense, she is the last of the humans on Mars who is upholding the tradition of what brought them there in the first place, while Gripp is living an inauthentic life, hiding himself in loneliness, unable to accept what he has found.

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