Ray Bradbury’s internationally acclaimed novel Fahrenheit 451 is a masterwork of twentieth-century literature set in a bleak, dystopian future. Guy Montag is a fireman. In his world, where television rules and literature is on the brink of extinction, firemen start fires rather than put them out. His job is to destroy the most illegal of commodities, the printed book, along with the houses in which they are hidden.

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

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Montag never questions the destruction and ruin his actions produce, returning each day to his bland life and wife, Mildred, who spends all day with her television “family.” But then he meets an eccentric young neighbor, Clarisse, who introduces him to a past where people didn’t live in fear, and to a present where one sees the world through the ideas in books instead of the mindless chatter of television.

When Mildred attempts suicide, and Clarisse suddenly disappears, Montag begins to question everything he has ever known. He starts hiding books in his home, and when his pilfering is discovered, the fireman has to run for his life.

After years of working as a fireman–one who burns books and enjoys his work–Guy Montag meets a young girl who makes him question his profession and the values of the society in which he lives. Stephan Hoye’s narration is perfectly matched to the subject matter: his tone is low and ominous, and his cadence shifts with the prose to ratchet up tension and suspense. He produces spot-on voices, and his versions of the gruff Captain Beatty, the playful Clarisse, and the fearful professor Faber are especially impressive. ~ Publishers Weekly

About the Author Ray Bradbury

Ray Bradbury has published some 500 short stories, novels, plays, and poems since his first story appeared in Weird Tales when he was twenty years old. For several years, he wrote for Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Twilight Zone, and in 1953 he wrote the screenplay for John Huston’s Moby Dick. From 1985 to 1992, he adapted his stories for his own half-hour show on cable television’s USA Network. The National Book Foundation, in 2000, awarded their Gold Medal to Ray Bradbury for his contribution to American literature. He lives in Los Angeles, California.



Metaphor and Reality collide
When I began teaching three years ago, I was required to teach this book. Having never read it before, I began reading it just before our winter break. As I soaked up the story of the book, I realized my students were already living it. They begged me daily, “Ms. Hill, why do we have to read this stupid book? Can’t we just watch the movie?” As I got deeper and deeper into the book, I grew increasingly depressed about the future of the world.

Then I realized: Bradbury has given me a picture of what might be, if we are not careful. His book written nearly fifty years ago peers just twenty minutes into the future now. Technological developments he had no name for then are very real today. For example, his seashell radio is clearly the walkman many of us see pressed in the ears of teenagers daily. TV screens are growing larger and larger and flat screens with HDTV are on the market now. The next step is clearly the full wall television of Mildred’s parlor. Robot dogs like Aibo are just a hop skip and a jump away from the dreaded hound.

But this is a future preventable. Maybe. But if popular culture is constantly valued above thoughtful consideration and education, we’ll march right into a land of burning books and intellectualism on the run.

Bradbury’s book made me feel defiant. They could never take my books from me. They could burn me with them if they want, but that’s what it’ll take before I give up my freedom to think for myself.

And as for my students, they remind me every day what an uphill battle I have been sent to fight. ~ Ammy L. Hill

Bradbury’s classic parable on the evils of censorship
I am teaching “Fahrenheit 451″ as the example of a dsytopian novel in my Science Fiction class, although it is certainly one of the most atypical of that particular type of narrative discourse. Compared to such heavy weight examples as George Orwell’s “1984,” Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World,” Yevgeny Zamiatin’s “We,” Ray Bradbury’s imaginative meditation on censorship seems like light reading. But the delicious irony of a world in which firemen start fires remains postent and the idea of people memorizing books so they will be preserved for future generations is compelling. Of course, there have been more documented cases of “book burning,” albeit in less literal forms, since “Fahrenheit 451″ was first published in 1953, so an argument can be made that while all the public debate was over how close we were the Orwellian future envisioned in “1984,” it is Bradbury’s little parable that may well be more realistic (especially in terms of the effects of television).

The novel is based on a short story, “The Fireman,” that Bradbury published in “Galaxy Science Fiction” in 1951 and then expanded into “Fahrenheit 451″ two years later. However, those who have studied Bradbury’s writings caw trace key elements back to a 1948 story “Pillar of Fire” and the “Usher II” story from his 1950 work “The Martian Chronicles.” Beyond that, there is the historical record of the Nazis burning books in 1933. The story is of a future world in which everyone understands that books are for burning, along with the houses in which they were hidden. Guy Montage is a fireman who has been happy in his work for ten years, but suddenly finds himself asking questions when he meets a teenage girl and an old professor.

“Fahrenheit 451″ is not only about censorship, but also about the inherent tension in advanced societies between knowledge and ignorance. Reading this novel again I am reminded about Pat Paulsen’s editorial on the old “Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” (a series well acquainted with the perils of censorship) about how we might enjoy freedom of speech in this country but we do not enjoy freedom of hearing because “there is always the danger of something being said.” Censorship, in practical terms, is the effort of those who do not want others to hear what they find offensive, for whatever reasons, basically because it leads to people thinking thoughts they do not want them to be thinking. Through the rambling diatribes of Captain Beatty, Bradbury makes this point quite clear to his readers.

Even though this is essentially a novella, Bradbury’s work retains the charm of a short story. The recurring use of animal imagery throughout the story, the use of the mythic ideas of the salamander and the phoenix, make “Fahrenheit 451″ more poetic than any other dystopian work. Even if it is predominantly a one note argument regarding censorship, it is impossible to deny that Bradbury makes a clear and convincing case for his position. Besides, there is something to be said for any work that insures that beyond the point at which water freezes the only other recognizable number on the Fahrenheit scale is the point at which book paper starts to burn. ~ Lawrance M. Bernabo

A message that grows more important every day
It was a pleasure to burn. So begins, with this absolutely perfect opening line, Ray Bradbury’s celebrated exposition of the dangers of censorship. Everybody knows that Fahrenheit 451 is a novel about book-burning, but this story goes much deeper than those not having read it may suspect. Its message truly does become even more germane and prophetic with every passing day. The skeleton of the plot is rather basic, really. Guy Montag is a fireman whose job it is to burn books and the houses in which these dangerous manifestations of inane scribbling reside – usually hidden. No one even remembers a time when firemen actually put out fires.

We join Guy’s life as he enters into a cusp of uncertainty. He has dared to pilfer a book here and there and stash them in his house, a most dangerous crime indeed. He soon meets a free-spirited teenager who breathes life into his state of uncertainty and opens his mind to brand new thoughts and possibilities. When she makes him admit that he is not happy, his life is changed forever. He can’t take the lack of substance all around him, the wife who thinks of nothing but “the family” (a type of interactive programming that dominates the living room), the impending war which everyone essentially ignores.

He knows there must be something else in life, and he comes to believe that the enlightenment he is after must surely be contained in books. Montag’s conversations with his Fire Chief on this subject are quite astounding and revealing, and between this and Montag’s friendship with an old former professor, we learn how Montag’s world came to be this way.

The government did not simply ban books overnight. Censorship started slowly and at low levels. Some minority group complained about this – deleted; another group complained about that – gone; these fellows over here object to so-and-so – zip. So many little pieces of books were removed that, over time, the very essence of books was destroyed. While the government has now come to insist that reading books is a crime, the horrible truth of the matter is that the society itself, in its fractious ways, is the party responsible for this tragic state of affairs. Can there be a more timely topic for our own time?

We continually see history books being rewritten, “objectionable” words, phrases, and (horror of horrors) ideas removed from novels and poems so that no one can possibly be offended by anything under the sun. Censorship is a cancer on society, and the world needs visionaries such as Ray Bradbury to forcefully draw attention to the cold hard facts that a majority of the population seems to ignore or fails to acknowledge.

Once the true meaning has been chopped out of the books lining our shelves, it will be too late to reverse the momentum without the aid of some kind of miracle. Fahrenheit 451′s message is one that all people should be exposed to, and this novel is such a quick (but powerful) read that everyone really should read it. As horrible as it is to envision, I fear that this type of censorship could indeed happen here. ~ Daniel Jolley

A quick review of a great piece of literature
This is a very twisted book based on a time many years from now. A time when books weren’t made to be read, but to be burned. Guy Montag, the main character in this story never questioned why books were to be burned. He just went on with his job as a fireman and burnt them along with the homes of many brave people who wished to rebel against the wishes of an obviously deprived society.

One day he meets a young woman who tells him of a time when books were made to be enjoyed and not burned, and when people had the right to express their feelings by writing them. He also meets a scientist who helps him in his quest to find as many books as possible and read them all. He is later caught when his crazy wife, Milly, sounds the alarm that he has hidden books in their home. When the house is burned Montag kills his former boss, Captain Beaty, with a flame thrower. He then tries to escape the town and is almost caught, but makes his way to the forest and finds a group of highly educated people who have been through the same trails as he. He then joins there little circle and is never caught. ~ jenny bellrichard



Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Ray Bradbury

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