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

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(Other Format - Unabridged, 1 MP3, 5 hrs. 30 min.)

Reader Rating: (720 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Originality" See All

  • Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
  • Pub. Date: November 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9780786178681
  • Sales Rank: 698,888
  • Edition Description: Unabridged, 1 MP3, 5 hrs. 30 min.
 
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Synopsis

Fahrenheit 451. La temperatura a la que el papel se enciende y arde.

Como 1984 de George Orwell, como Un mundo feliz de Aldous Huxley, Fahrenheit 451 describe una civilización occidental esclavizada por los media, los tranquilizantes y el conformismo.

La visión de Bradbury es asombrosamente profética: las pantallas de TV ocupan paredes y exhiben folletines interactivos, unos auriculares transmiten a todas horas una insípida corriente de música y noticias, en las avenidas los coches corren a 150 kilómetros por hora persiguiendo a peatones; y el cuerpo de bomberos auxiliados por el Sabueso Mecánico, rastrea y elimina a los disidentes que conservan y leen libros.

La obra maestra de Ray Bradbury retrata una sociedad futurista en la que los bomberos queman viviendas y bibliotecas para destruir libros y evitar que la gente tenga un pensamiento independiente.

Fahrenheit 451 ofrece la historia de un sombrío y horroroso futuro. Montag, el protagonista, pertenece a una extraña brigada de bomberos cuya misión, paradójicamente, no es la de sofocar incendios sino la de provocarlos para quemar libros. Porque en el país de Montag está terminantemente prohibido leer. Porque leer obliga a pensar, y en el país de Montag está prohibido pensar. Porque leer impide ser ingenuamente feliz, y en el país de Montag hay que ser feliz a la fuerza, y la ignorancia es lo mejor para ser feliz...

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

Book review of Fahrenheit 451by J_Alexander

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November 25, 2008: Fahrenheit 451 is one of Ray Bradbury?s most famous books, other than The Martian Chronicles. Fahrenheit 451 caught my attention from the first sentence, then, the next and the next pulling me deeper into the story. The story of the book, twists and turns like a snake coiling up, and then it strikes, leaving it?s mark in your head for the rest of your life. Mr. Bradbury?s style is very good; I loved the pure depth of each paragraph. Fahrenheit 451 is about government gone astray, censoring books because of the political 'problems' that are ?caused? by the books. Fahrenheit 451 shows the evils of a world without thought, where the ?family? on the multiple wall televisors, runs your mind for you and where cars aren?t allowed to travel at speeds under fifty miles an hour.
The story starts with the protagonist, Guy Montag, off in a great blaze, which is emphasizing his love for burning books. Soon he meets a young girl named Clarisse, who causes Montag to realize more and more, how deprived their society is. Montag soon finds that his relationship with his wife Mildred is not going well. After speaking with Clarisse, Montag finds Mildred over-dosed on sleeping pills. After calling in doctors, who were no more than a cleanup crew, pumping her out, cleaning her up, like maids in a hotel room. And then Mildred disputes the fact she even took any pills. After a while of Montag thinking about the way things are, Captain Beatty, the captain of the Firemen and Montag?s boss, starts to see that Montag is changing his attitude. Beatty can tell what is going on with Montag. Apparently, Beatty had gone through the same thing, as he quoted books better than anyone else. Montag finally meets up with a man named Mr. Faber, who was a scared little man. A professor at one point in time, he worked to find a way to bring books back to being legal. Finally he gained some help from Montag.
The plot goes on, Montag becoming more and more aware of the situation of the world. After seeing a woman burn with her books, Montag is more curious of why someone would love books this much. Montag learns more and more about books, as he hides books away to read them in the quite of his home. As Montag finds more life in books he realizes that all the time he has been a murderer of `life?, of the books, which seemed more human than the people. Soon, Montag reads poetry for Mildred and her friends, which does not go over well?
All in all, this is a great book. I would advise anyone who has not read it to go pick it up. I loved the book, and loved the theme of the book. I hope that anyone that reads it finds as much pleasure in reading it as I did. I hope to read more of Bradbury?s work soon. Enjoy the book!

Hotby Anonymous

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July 13, 2008: Fahrenheit 451 is undoubtedly one of my favorite books. The characters are full, the setting is spectacular, and the humanity is real. It is more than just about the defiance of law to do what is right, it is the struggle we go through every day to listen to our hearts.


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