The Martian Chronicles -

Bradbury draws parallels between the colonization of Mars and the American frontier. He critiques how settlers often bring the very vices—greed, bureaucracy, and environmental disregard—they are trying to escape.

The stories are steeped in a "Midwestern Gothic" atmosphere. Characters often find themselves trapped in illusions of their past, unable to reconcile their memories of Earth with the cold, alien reality of Mars. The Martian Chronicles

Bradbury’s prose is famously lyrical and "poetic," eschewing the hard science of his contemporaries for metaphors and emotional truth. He doesn't focus on how a rocket works, but rather on how it feels to be the person inside it looking back at a dying home. Bradbury draws parallels between the colonization of Mars