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(Mass Market Paperback - REISSUE)
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!
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.
More Reviews and RecommendationsA 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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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.Reader Rating:
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November 21, 2009: Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 is a compelling novel about a culture that burns books. Montag's wife, Mildred, attempts suicide by overdosing on sleeping pills in the beginning of the book, which leads us to think that she isn't very happy, though she says she is. Mildred represents one side of society, which believes that burning books is for the best, and that the most important thing is happyness. Clarisse, Montag's seventeen year old neighbor, represents a side of society that is looked down upon, the people who ask why, not how, and the people who take time to think about life in general. Clarisse asks Montag why he is a fireman, if he has ever observed nature, and if he is happy, making him think about what the answers to these questions are. The fire chief, Beautty, on the other hand, represents the government and the authority in the novel. He has great influence over Montag, but he is also sly, and can confuse and persuade Montag to do things that he doesn't necessarily think are right. When Montag calls in sick and Beautty stops by to talk with him, Beatty uses Montag's conflicting emotions to try to convince him to keep burning books, saying that the firemen are the ones who keep society happy and balanced. By the end of the lecture, however, Montag has decided that he never wants to burn books again. This is the first time that it is really stated that Montag doesn't want to be a fireman, and it shows how wrong society is when the a 'guardian' of society thinks that the society is severly flawed.
When Beautty provokes Montag to the point that Montag turns the flame thrower on him, only later does Montag realize that maybe it wasn't his arrogance that was his destruction; maybe Beautty wanted to die. Montag lays on the ground and sobs when this thought occurs to him. He is devastated because his society had made a man insane enough to want to die, to make fun of an armed man, to just stand there joking around when he knew that he could die any minute. Beautty's suicide is almost like Mildred's attempted suicide; she thinks she's happy, but she really is so unhappy that she is willing to die. By foreshadowing war throughout the book by telling of jets soaring above in the night and suicide bombings in the news, the author builds up to the final destruction of the city. Almost everything is destroyed, and, though Mildred is killed by the explosion, the book ends on a surprisingly optimistic note; Granger, who is the leader of the band, analogises society to the phoenix, a legendary bird who dies and then is reborn from the ashes. As they go back to the city to rebuild what is left of it, Montag remebers a verse from the Bible describing a tree of life who's leaves can be used to heal the nations, implying that eventually, cities across the world that were destroyed would eventually be healed. Fahrenheit 451 captures the reader's attention while also alluding to very important issues, such as the importance of freedom of speech and not being influenced by society. The novel reveals the faults of the human condition in a subtle and yet powerful way. Weaknesses in society and ourselves are demonstrated artfully, and it is easy to connect with the characters, to feel their struggles and their joys. This novel is captivating and deep, making us think about what happens in the book, what happens in our lives, and what could happen in our future.