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Fahrenheit 451

By:   •  Book/Movie Report  •  1,284 Words  •  May 13, 2011  •  1,764 Views

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Fahrenheit 451

In this book, books are burned and in the beginning Montag is the one who burns them. He doesn’t burn them because he is forced, he does it because he enjoys it, and He says he does in the very beginning of this book. When the end of this book approaches his ideas of books have developed so much that he wants to save them.

In the beginning of the book Montag did not have any thoughts, he never questioned anything, when someone said jump he said how high. Over the period of reading this book he went from a drone to a half way normal person found throughout our society today. Thanks to Clarisse he wants to learn, he wants to know what is going on in the world.

He feels compassion for other people in the end to. Talking to Clarisse so much made him realize that people are people not just objects. The old lady mad him feel compassion to. Seeing her, giving her life for her books made him realize the importance the books had. He wanted to save the old woman.

Montag is confusing, he changes. An emotionless drone in this book became a man who was going to make a difference in his world.

Montag is a confusing character. In the beginning he loves to burn books and in the end he wants to save them. He went through drastic changes all through this book.

G uy Montag is a fireman who burns books in a futuristic American city. In Montag's world, firemen start fires rather than putting them out. The people in this society do not read books, enjoy nature, spend time by themselves, think independently, or have meaningful conversations. Instead, they drive very fast, watch excessive amounts of television on wall-size sets, and listen to the radio on "Seashell Radio" sets attached to their ears.

Montag encounters a gentle seventeen-year-old girl named Clarisse McClellan, who opens his eyes to the emptiness of his life with her innocently penetrating questions and her unusual love of people and nature. Over the next few days, Montag experiences a series of disturbing events. First, his wife, Mildred, attempts suicide by swallowing a bottle of sleeping pills. Then, when he responds to an alarm that an old woman has a stash of hidden literature, the woman shocks him by choosing to be burned alive along with her books. A few days later, he hears that Clarisse has been killed by a speeding car. Montag's dissatisfaction with his life increases, and he begins to search for a solution in a stash of books that he has stolen from his own fires and hidden inside an air-conditioning vent.

When Montag fails to show up for work, his fire chief, Beatty, pays a visit to his house. Beatty explains that it's normal for a fireman to go through a phase of wondering what books have to offer, and he delivers a dizzying monologue explaining how books came to be banned in the first place. According to Beatty, special-interest groups and other "minorities" objected to books that offended them. Soon, books all began to look the same, as writers tried to avoid offending anybody. This was not enough, however, and society as a whole decided to simply burn books rather than permit conflicting opinions. Beatty tells Montag to take twenty-four hours or so to see if his stolen books contain anything worthwhile and then turn them in for incineration. Montag begins a long and frenzied night of reading.

Overwhelmed by the task of reading, Montag looks to his wife for help and support, but she prefers television to her husband's company and cannot understand why he would want to take the terrible risk of reading books. He remembers that he once met a retired English professor named Faber sitting in a park, and he decides that this man might be able to help him understand what he reads. He visits Faber, who tells him that the value of books lies in the detailed awareness of life that they contain. Faber says that Montag needs not only books but also the leisure to read them and the freedom to act upon their ideas.

Faber agrees to help Montag with his reading, and they concoct a risky scheme to overthrow the status quo. Faber will contact a printer and begin reproducing books, and Montag will plant books in the homes of firemen to discredit the profession and to destroy the machinery of censorship. Faber gives him a two-way radio earpiece (the "green bullet") so that he can hear what Montag hears and talk to him secretly.

Montag goes home, and soon two of his wife's friends

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