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Fahrenheit 451 (Cliffs Notes)

Fahrenheit 451 (Cliffs Notes)
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Additional Fahrenheit 451 (Cliffs Notes) Information

This is Bradbury's best-known novel. The science fiction tale concerns censorship and anti-intellectualism, carried on in an alternate society that conducts huge book burnings as part of the social agenda. It is a spooky and yet uplifting book.

This concise supplement to Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 helps students understand the overall structure of the novel, actions and motivations of the characters, and the social and cultural perspectives of the author.

 

What Customers Say About Fahrenheit 451 (Cliffs Notes):

We don't have to be politically correct ALL the time, especially if it is read it in the historical context it was written. The value of this theme is obvious considering the carefree attitude most of the youth have today. The afterword and the Coda point out some interesting things about rewriting books to include everyone. Great book. Look at Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer. One of several books assigned to high school students which intrigued me. Scary look into a possible future if the censors get their way. Several selections in the high school cannon are introspective of the human character.

This is always a fun book to read, which I will be reading in the future as well. I really enjoyed this book, but the story line was a little different then I had expected it to be.

Saw the film a few years ago and it remained in my mind. Very interesting and prescient, considering it was written 50 years ago - it really foresees the advent of the computer age and lowest common denominator mass media.

All of the books in the city are to be burned because they create conflicting views amongst the people, ultimately resulting in fighting and unhappiness. The main character, Montag, is a firefighter that has always done his job (burning books) without questioning. Fahrenheit 451 is a great book that should not be taken in a literal sense, as it is jam packed with symbolism. Majority of the people are unable to form their own independent thoughts, as the schools are even changed in a way that students only learn facts and not problem solving, logic, reason, or other philosophical subjects. However, after a strange series of events, he slowly begins to develop his own thoughts, and starts questioning the society he lives in. In this futuristic setting, nobody seems to be concerned with anything but their own happiness. These people spend majority of their time on frivolous things like fast cars, large televisions, and a type of ear-piece radio.

I read it in high school, too, and I recall that I enjoyed it. It postulates what people might be willing to give up in order to have "peace of mind," and poses material enough for hours of stimulating debate about the real value of independent thought and its importance to society). It's a treasure, and a novel to be savored periodically throughout one's life.I especially like this edition which mentions on the cover that it was released as the "50th Anniversary Edition." Not only does it contain Bradbury's 1979 Coda and 1983 Afterword, but there is an illuminating interview with the author where he discusses his own views about how the book has held up to the passing of the years, his approach to writing in general, how he views the "future" we are now living which he imagined in the early 1950s, and even what he considers the weaknesses of the movie version of his book.This is great American literature. He is a master story teller. This review is simply a friendly nudge for those of you out there who have already read this book once, perhaps when you were quite young, and have not re-visited it. (If you have been off of the planet for the past half-century or so, this is a parable, set in the not-too-distant future, about book-burning. I had also forgotten that this novel won the National Book Award. The novel has aged beautifully.

I picked it up because my teenage daughter is reading it as an assignment for an English class. [This review is for the paperback "50th Anniversary Edition" of the novel, which contains special additional essays and an interview which enrich the experience of reading the novel].I'm not going to recount the plot details since this book should be a part of every book lover's lexicon. Scott Fitzgerald's short storys, The Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald-- just in case I need to re-read a wonderful short story or two before sleep comes. This is a novel so current in its political and social re-imaginings that it could have been published last year.I love Bradbury's books.

Actually, its insights, in light of our computer age and the changes which are being wrought in publishing and in the education of our children, are astoundingly relevant. I had forgotten how mesmerizing Bradbury's prose is. Please re-read early and often. Not only did this futuristic masterpiece affect me completely differently when I read it again after such a long lapse of time, but I found so many nuances in the book which are just not present in the movie Fahrenheit 451 (wonderful as the movie is). But for some reason I had never re-read it. But as I said, I had not re-read this particular book in a long time. But the novel is really about what makes a person an individual.

His The Illustrated Man sits on my nightstand bookshelf right beside a copy of Ring Lardner's short stories, Ring Around the Bases: The Complete Baseball Stories of Ring Lardner and a copy of F. I got so much more out of the book now that I am older and have been in the world for awhile. I urge you to do so as soon as possible.I just re-read this incredible novel for the first time in thirty years. Bad move on my part.

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