Sunday, May 16, 2010

Fahrenheit 451

I finally finished reading it! I postponed writing this until after the B&C Banned Book Club meeting, but I don't think I'll wait in the future. The main reason being that it contaminates my thoughts on the subject if I discuss different aspects of the books that we covered at the meeting. Especially if it was a subject that I didn't even think about. The only downside to writing immediately is that sometimes I remember something that I did/did not like after I've finished the blog. Ah well.

On to the book!

Fahrenheit 451 is a dystopic novel written by Ray Bradbury in 1953. Originally written as a short story called The Fireman for a Sci-Fi magazine, it was later expanded and then published in Playboy for $400.

This story features a society that lives in a fast-paced world, teaches destruction in school and promotes an introverted way of life plugged in to the radio or watching the wall screens. It is also a society that has chosen to stop reading anything more substantial than comics and has taken to burning books as well as the homes they're found in.

When Guy Montag, a fireman by trade, meets his new neighbour, Clarisse McClellen, he begins to question the world as he knows it. A conversation with his fire chief leads Montag to read the books that he'd been stealing from homes as they burned and a meeting with an old man in a park proves the old man to be a scholar - a closet book reader by the name of Faber. After an outburst (involving poetry) in front of his wife and her friends, Montag's hidden cache of books is burned. In the confrontation, Montag murders the fire chief and goes on the run. The infallible mechanical hound is sent to track him down and he runs to Faber for help.

To hide his scent, Montag travels downstream on a river until he comes to a farm on the outskirts of the city. Montag then meets up with some fellow scholars to discuss books and who has retained what book in their memories. In the end, the city is obliterated after repeated warnings on the radio regarding the incoming war.

I found this book to be incredibly interesting - and informative. Considering this book was written over 50 years ago, it is almost scary how Bradbury could have thought this stuff up. I found that the parts of the story that I was most intrigued by really didn't have anything to do with the immediate story: it provided information to the society that Montag was a part of and the problems that were prevalent in that era (ie, how groups of kids aged 12-16 would joyride around and run people over for the fun of it; how little parents interacted with their children outside of shipping them off to school or plunking them down in front of the tv; how people stopped interacting with eachother and would "interact" with the characters on tv - their "family").

In an age where books are already losing a battle with the internet and cell phones, it is fascinating to read about a world that is already there. And it's frightening to think that one day we may soon arrive.

The next book on the Banned Book Club list is Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie.

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