Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, Christopher Hurt (Read by)

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(Audio - Unabridged, 4 cassettes, 5 hrs. 30 min.)

  • Pub. Date: November 2005
  • Sales Rank: 665,748

    Reader Rating: (916 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Originality" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: November 2005
    • Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
    • Format: Audio
    • Sales Rank: 665,748

    Synopsis

    Guy Montag was a fireman whose job it was to start fires...

    The system was simple. Everyone understood it. Books were for burning...along with the houses in which they were hidden.

    Guy Montag enjoyed his job. He had been a fireman for ten years, and he had never questioned the pleasure of the midnight runs nor the joy of watching pages consumed by flames...never questioned anything until he met a seventeen-year-old girl who told him of a past when people were not afraid.

    Then he met a professor who told him of a future in which people could think...and Guy Montag suddenly realized what he had to do!

    Annotation

    First published in 1953, Fahrenheit 451 is a classic novel set in the future when books forbidden by a totalitarian regime are burned. The hero, a book burner, suddenly discovers that books are flesh and blood ideas that cry out silently when put to the torch.

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    Biography

    A veteran sci-fi author with side talents for poetry, plays and screenwriting, Ray Bradbury has had a long career of provoking thought and a compelling uneasiness in generations of readers. But rather than create worlds made for escape, Bradbury refracts our own foibles through otherworldly prisms.

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    Customer Reviews

    Fahrenheit 451 Reviewby Anonymous

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    December 05, 2009: "It was a pleasure to burn. It was a special pleasure to see things eaten, to see things blackened and changed." One of the opening lines to this tale of irony and destruction. Fahrenheit 451 is a story about firemen who actually set the fires. It is about a man named Guy Montag who is going through doubt about what he is doing and why. He begins to think of his life and feel empty. This books is about his journey to find the truth, answers to his questions. One of the biggest issues in this book is the fact that they are encouraging ignorance and frowning upon knowledge (though they do not fulling explain why this is). In a society still hundreds of years in the future, they go through atomic wars, burn books, and live life like it is nothing. In Fahrenheit 451 there are a lot of things that are in the story only as symbols. Mirrors, the Phoenix, and blood. Families are not highly regarded. Woman talk about their children with no respect, and they do not care for them. People consider the actors on TV to be their family. Bradbury put a lot of the things that were happening during the 50s (when he wrote the book) into his story as things that were in the future that the book is set in. People in this society don't care about or enjoy books, and the few that do are considered crazy. Pretty much everything about this futuristic society (as in the people) is backwards from how we live now. The way people deal with things in their lives, in this story, are in a sense, crazy. They don't care, they partake in many reckless activities on a regular bases, and they have no remorse if anyone was hurt, or even if people die. It's as though they feel no emotion. In my opinion the characters and the way they act really portray the horror of what life could possibly become in the near or even far future. If you read this book and think that it could possibly happen, it would probably scare you. It seems sort of crazy, Bradburys view of the future, so much of what he wrote in this book, is actually happening today (the "seashell radios" are like iPods and the wall TVs are much like our huge flat screen TVs).

    Fahrenheit 451by Anonymous

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    November 23, 2009: Guy Montag is a fireman who instead of putting out fires starts them. He lives in an unnamed city in the future, or at least what was the future at the time the book was written. The people in the world he lives in are very in to technology, never read books, and don't have their own opinions.

    In the book Fahrenheit 451, it never says why exactly people are not allowed to read books. One of the reasons that they don't read books that the book only hints at is that people do not like the feeling of not measuring up to other people. As humans, we all have a tendency to feel envious of those who have more than us. It seems like this may have been one of the themes of the book. Ray Bradbury has never said whether or not he was referring to any minority groups.

    Another possible theme is that with the explosion of pop culture and technology, people are starting to not pay as much attention to reading as they should be. In the book, Ray Bradbury mentions that in this futuristic world, everyone drives fast calls, watches too much television, and listens to their music too loud. Sounds familiar, right? Even though Ray Bradbury wrote this book more than fifty years ago, he seemed to have a fairly good idea about where society was headed, except on a more extreme scale and with the banning of books.

    In this book, with all of the focus on technology, people do not read books and are banned from doing so. This causes society to be ignorant. Since firefighters in this book are supposed to burn anything that may threaten the possibility of the population being equal, they are therefore promoting ignorance amongst society. Montag starts to question the meaning of the need to promote this and searches for the knowledge and the meaning of the books that he burns. In this book, most of society does not have this knowledge. Those that do have books or knowledge have to hide it or they will have it burned.

    I think that in this book, books represented knowledge. Knowledge that caused jealousy from those that did not have it. This is why I believe that the books were taken away. No one wants to feel inferior to someone else so if everyone was ignorant and there was no knowledge that only few knew, then no one could be better.


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