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These are not books, lumps of lifeless paper, but minds alive on the shelves. ... ~Gilbert Highet

Book Review:
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Banned

Thursday, October 21, 2010  at 7:00 AM
Title: Fahrenheit 451
Author: Ray Bradbury
Publisher: Del Rey Books (Randomhouse)
Date: 1996 (1953)
ISBN: 9780345410016
Genre: Science Fiction
Format: Trade Paperback, 179 pages
Rating:

I was immediately drawn into Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury It was a very good fit for me. I read it because it turned up repeatedly on Banned Book Week displays as well as on banned lists. As I read, I could find nothing that warranted banning. I began to second-guess myself—thinking that I had misunderstood. Maybe it was recommended reading for the week since it was about the banning of books. But that was not the case. Some reasons given for the banning of Fahrenheit 451 include (1) offensive language and content, and (2) questionable themes.


From the back cover:
"The system was simple. Everyone undestood it. Books were for burning, along with the houses in which they were hidden."
Guy Montag was a fireman whose job it was to start fires. And he 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 Guy met a professor who told him of a future in which people could think. And Guy Montag suddenly realized what he had to do ...

The setting is futuristic America. I've read commentary that places it in either the 21st or 24th century. Regardless, the setting plays a significant role in the plot. There's a police-state atmosphere. Beautiful landscapes are replaced with smaller patches of real estate upon which houses with "standard appointments" are built. Though many have conformed to this soulless society, there are still those who remember "how it was." I found the primary characters of Guy, Clarisse, Mildred, and Professor Faber to be the most developed. A suspense element drives the plot and supports the suspended delineation of the secondary characters.

I can only marvel at the similarities between Bradbury's dystopian society and that of today. The similarities are uncanny! Our mammoth flatscreens are only small one-dimensional versions of the parlor walls. Images constantly invade our minds—numbing our thought processes. Though not as often, I still sometimes leave an unwatched-tv on in a room. I thought my saving grace was that it was tuned to the cooking channel—or better still, a religious sermon. When I enter the room, someone is there demonstrating a cooking method or sharing a recipe or preaching or praying. But it actually doesn't matter what's on. The fact still remains that what's coming out of the tv (the wall) is being introduced into my psyche with little effort on my part. We still have time to reclaim the segments of our minds currently placated by what comes out of the flat-screen wall.

We are fastly approaching the society depicted in Fahrenheit 451. Whether books are banned or burned, the fact still remains that they are not being read. Our mp3 players are equivalent to the seashells the people placed in their ears. And while calling 222-TIPS (or its equivalent in your locale) is quite beneficial to society, it can still be likened to the parlor walls instructing citizens to open their doors at a given time in order to help catch Montag. These are but a few of the similarities shared between today's society and that depicted in Fahrenheit 451 .

This book should be an eye-opener to all of us. It certainly was to me. Rather than being engaged in thought-provoking activity, we have become a society of spectators, constantly needing to be entertained. The scenes depicted in the book are so much like the times in which we live. Bradbury is a thinker. Over fifty years ago, he could see where society was headed. I enjoyed reading this author so much that I picked up Now and Forever, a compilation of two previously-written short stories. I recommend Fahrenheit 451 to all readers. The following quote from wiki answers echoes the thoughts I entertained while reading Fahrehheit 451.

Like the opposition to "1984", the opposition to "Fahrenheit 451" seems to grow as the depicted society grows too similar to our own. One of these uncomfortable parallels is today's increased use of entertainment in place of learning and culture. Ray Bradbury has stated that this dumbing down was one of the concerns he was trying to raise.

7 comments:

BookQuoter said...

I agree with your observations although I will definitely be one to try and resist this 100%. I have yet to read an electronic book and only listen to an audio book in my car. I am usually reading while my husband watches television. I am just there for company:)

Jennifer said...

I read this for a bookclub and it was amazing. I really enjoyed it. I agree, it really was an eyeopener.

Donna said...

I'm sure there are many more who regard F 451 as a wake-up call. When I compared television to the parlor walls, I was referring to the habit many of us have of leaving it on while the room is unoccupied. I didn't mean to imply that I don't watch television; but I can say I don't watch it as much since I stepped up my reading. I love a good movie; and I have my favorite sitcoms. What I'm working on is not having the tv on unless I'm in the room consciously watching it. Oh, and I only purchased an mp3 player recently—after I became an audiobook fan. I do have music on it though.

bermudaonion said...

I haven't read this since high school, but I'm sure I'd get a lot more out of it if I read it now. We're the ones creating a generation of non-readers with the gadgets we buy to keep the kids entertained right from the start. How did we survive car trips with out our own personal DVD player back in the day?

Cozy in Texas said...

Great review. Like the descriptions in 1984 this seems to be the direction in which we are heading.
Ann
Cozy In Texas

Donna said...

Kathy, you are so right about the way we have contributed to this society. I hope interest in this book increases. Anyone who reads it now would be able to make the connection. Cozy, I am glad you like my review and can also see the signs. Now I will check out your blog to see if it focuses on cozy mysteries. (I refrained from using contractions to avoid the Blogger code that they cause. I wonder if Blogger is trying to encourage the use of TM-speak in the comment area.)

hopeinbrazil said...

I've been an avid reader for 40 years,but somehow this book escaped my attention until just a few years ago. Even without the parallels to modern day culture, it is a pretty powerful book. I'm still haunted by the image of people "becoming" books so that those books would not be lost forever. I've got Bradbury's Dandelion Wine on my TBR pile, but I'm afraid to read it in case it doesn't live up to the excellence of F451.

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