Rating: Summary: Book Review for Farenheit 451 Review: In a world where imagination and fantasy are shunned upon, there isn't much room for Clarisse McClellan...the young teenage neighbor of Guy Montag. Montag is a fireman unlike the ones today...his group is employed to burn the books the radicals conceal. Ray Bradbury's prediction of the future shows a world in which questions and ideas are damaging, and the only information you are given are minor details. The books are burned for this very reason, Fire Captain Beatty explains this best, `...and the books say nothing! Nothing you can teach or believe. They're about nonexistent people, figments of imaginations, if they're fiction. And if they're nonfiction, its worse, one professor calling another an idiot...you come away lost.' Clarisse McClellan is Montag's guide to see the way life was. Enjoying the finer things we see and take for granted, like picking dandelions and skipping on the sidewalk. Simple pleasures have become insignificant, and Montag realizes he's part of the problem. After Clarisse mysteriously disappears, Montag begins to hide books in his house, beginning to regain what he never knew he lost. At home he's not alone. In fact he's married and living with his wife Mildred. Mildred is a constant reminder of the pathetic not-so distant future that lies ahead. She spends most of her time with her `television family', a collection of three large walls in which you interact with the sets. As Montag begins to learn about the past, Mildred gets suspicious and turns him in. The end may surprise you when Montag realizes what he's supposed to do... This book portrayed a hazy, gray picture of the future, much like the book 1984. Although, it did not emphasize key points of the books with any tension or suspense. Overall, this book laid an important lesson upon me, and that is to take this book not as a lesson, but a warning.
Rating: Summary: A brightly burning insight just as important today Review: This masterful work of future prevention as Bradbury furvently declares it speaks volumes about the ease in which even a society such as our own (especially a society such as our own) can censor the voices of freedom that speak through books. Even though some of the material and references employed are a bit dated, as I said before, this was not intended as a prediction, only a warning. Are we wise enough to heed its message?
Rating: Summary: The reaching flames of Fahrenheit 451 consumed my attention! Review: Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, is a classic story of censorship, in an overprotective society. Stories are told of people's happiness, newly found after learning from the many banned works of classic authors such as Shakespeare. This distopic society uses feigned happiness to mask the true meaning of life. They are overwhelmed by external stimuli to prevent them from learning anything new from within. This is an excellent book, and I reccommend that anybody who has had any experience with censorship read this. Anybody who has already read Fahrenheit 451 should read it again, and again, to see how society has changed to, or away from this form.
Rating: Summary: A Burning Thought Review: I haven't read this book for some time, but in my town's recent election, we voted down a library tax nearly 2 to 1. Upset, I wrote a "scorching" essay to the local paper about how we should just burn our books if we refuse to fund the library.Writing the essay allowed me to appreciate just how brilliant this book is. It is dubbed a "classic" for a reason - the residue will remain with you long after you have read it. It has been about five years since I read this book, but I still recall many details, themes and characters in the novel with great clarity. A book to make you passionate about reading books! Self-serving, maybe, but what wonderful treasures they are. And to find a book that so opens the mind and stirs the soul is priceless. If you haven't read this book (why not?!?) it is without a doubt worth your time - and you, fair reader, deserve the enjoyment it will bring you. For those who've had the pleasure of reading the book, let me say I'm going to dust off my copy. I hope you do the same.
Rating: Summary: we shall this day light such a candle... Review: Play the man, Master Ridley; we shall this day light such a candle, by God's grace, in England as I trust shall never be put out. -Hugh Latimer Guy Montag is a Fireman, but in the future envisioned by Ray Bradbury, firemen don't put out fires, they start them. Firemen are responsible for burning books; all of which are banned, so that the people of this dystopia will not be troubled by difficult thoughts. Instead of reading, they watch endless soap operas on large screen TV's and the government provides for all their needs. Guy has had some qualms about his job, but he's never really thought through exactly what it is he's doing. But then, in short order, he meets an odd young neighborhood girl named Clarisse McClellan, his wife nearly kills herself with sleeping pills and, finally, when the firemen are called to an old woman's house, she refuses to leave: Montag placed his hand on the woman's elbow. "You can come with me," "No," she said. "Thank you, anyway." "I'm counting to ten," said Beatty. "One. Two." "Please," said Montag. "Go on," said the woman. "Three. Four." "Here." Montag pulled at the woman. The woman relied quietly, "I want to stay here." "Five. Six." "You can stop counting," she said. She opened the fingers of one hand slightly and in the palm of the hand was a single slender object. An ordinary kitchen match. And before they can light the fire, she lights it herself and Guy is forced to consider what it is about books that would make a person do such a thing. As he tells his wife: Last night I thought about all the kerosene I've used in the past ten years. And I though about books. And for the first time I realized that a man was behind each one of the books. A man had to think them up. A man had to take a long time to put them down on paper. And I'd never thought of that before. As it turns out, the old woman has, like Hugh Latimore, lit a fire that will change the world, because Guy joins the nascent resistance to the book-burning government. He remembers meeting an old man named Faber in a park some time earlier and the hunch he had that the man had a book. Indeed, when Guy tracks him down, it turns out that Faber was a professor and he explains to Guy why books are of value: Number one, ... quality of information. Number two: leisure to digest it. And number three: the right to carry out actions based on what we learn from the interaction of the first two. Each bolstering the other's confidence, Guy and Faber set out to resist the system and, ultimately, Guy escapes to the wilderness beyond the city, where wandering bands of men are preserving great texts in memory, against the day when the knowledge is needed and learning is again valued. While not quite in a league with Orwell or Koestler, Bradbury's classic tale is an important treatment of the central themes of the century (of every century). His vision of a society where people have traded freedom for security had a particular resonance during the Cold War, but it should continue to be read as a cautionary tale. We head to the new millennium in the midst of the most spectacular flowering of Freedom that the world has ever known, but there is a continual tension in the species, between those who value that freedom, whatever its costs, and those who would choose the security offered by a controlled society and those who are afraid of uncomfortable ideas. freedom has the upper hand, but the struggle continues... GRADE: A-
Rating: Summary: A Classic Book That Holds Up Today Review: As much a cliché as it is to say, I think this book is even more relevant today then when originally written. I think Montag's wife's obsession with the "real people" she watches is such an uncanny parallel to the reality based shows that are so popular now that it's almost creepy. The fact that it was written so long ago only adds to the impact. There is also the similarity of the viewing walls and the 56 inch high definition T.V.s of today. It's a little like a horoscope though, the reader can read more into it then is there. Ray Bradbury's past future is dreary and bleak and no one cares for anyone else. I tend to be more of an optimist, I think there are still enough people in the world that care to prevent the kind of events that happen in this book to occur any time in the near future. I don't believe the main focus of this book (as most people think) is censorship at all but rather a love letter to books and the joy of reading. Mr Bradbury writes about the joys of reading as though he were describing a flesh and blood lover. He clearly despises censorship and complacency but he gives more of his passion to the love of the written word. I think the "not happy, but hopeful" ending shows his faith in man. This is literally a classic piece of fiction and it's impressive how much Ray Bradbury says in such a short novel. It's easy to read on several different levels. There's almost no excuse not to read this book.
Rating: Summary: Thirst for knowledge in a dehydrated land Review: In this day and age, with the internet, and TV, the printed word is becoming endangered. Ray Bradbury takes this to the next level in his masterpice in which books are illegal, and original thinking is considered odd. This book showes what can happen to our society if we let go of the written word.
Rating: Summary: Fahrenheit 451 is a masterpiece Review: If you have not read this book yet, you are missing out. This book by Ray Bradbury exposes you to why books are very important. A must read.
Rating: Summary: Fahrenheit 451 is a masterpiece Review: Ray Bradbury did well done job. this book exposes you to why books are so valuable. Reading is a gift from God. If you have not read it yet, you must because you are missing out on a terrific story.
Rating: Summary: Farenheit 451 Review: The book Farenheit 451 is a fabulous book. I think that it is like the book Z for Zachariah in the fact that they are both in the future. Also the people in the books are, at first, leading boring, uneventful lives. Then suddenly their lives change drastically. They are also alike in the fact that the main character in each book makes a dangerous escape. They are dislike because Montag's life changes mostly because of outside influence that he could have stopped. Anne's change couldn't have been stopped by something that she could do. the only problem that I have with Farenheit 451 is that it doesn't have a sequel. I like the the style of writing that Ray Bradbury uses.
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