Importance Of Setting In Ray Bradbury's The Illustrated Man

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In The Illustrated Man, author Ray Bradbury establishes the importance of setting in his story “The Visitor”. The characters in “The Visitor” are isolated because of the setting. In “The Visitor” the characters are sent to the secluded land of Mars so that their mental condition does not spread to others. The confinement leads the characters to a longing of home and being social again. The longing leads to the characters fighting over Leonard, which is a vital part of the story. Additionally, Leonard is able to create setting that the exiles desire to see. The settings Leonard creates remind the exiles of happier times. Saul and the other exiles become resentful of one another because they want to have Leonard and his fictional environments