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Examples Of Imagery In Fahrenheit 451

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The book Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury tells the story of a man named Guy Montag. Guy is a firefighter in the future, which means that firefighters produce fires instead of putting out fires. The reason the fires are made is to burn books. For whatever reason books have been declared illegal by this fictional society. One day, as Guy was walking home he meets a girl named Clarisse McClellan who shakes up his world a bit. Guy also has a wife named Mildred who loves to watch tv and she rarely has a conversation with Guy, which is kind of strange.
Ray Bradbury uses a lot of imagery and poetic language. He never says anything straightforward. It is very difficult to understand what is going on. “Her face was like a snow-covered island upon which rain might fall, but it felt no rain; over which clouds might pass their moving shadows, but she felt no shadow...There was a tremendous ripping sound as if two giant hands had torn ten thousand miles of …show more content…

His wife, and Clarisse are two good examples of this. When Guy meets Clarisse he is strangely attracted to her, not in a sexual way, he is just fascinated by her language and her personality. They become friends very quickly. When Guy is with Mildred, it seems to be that is trying to reach out to her, but she won't budge, she seems to be in her own little world always thinking about the next thing.
Early on in the book there doesn't seem to be any plot that is introduced. The book starts with Guy heading back to the firehouse after he finishes burning a house, he takes a shower, freshens up, and goes home. He meets Clarisse on his way home and then he walks her home, then he goes home and he goes to sleep. He wakes up the next morning, eats breakfast with his wife, then goes back to work. The book hasn't yet hit a big obstacle for Guy to overcome, or introduce any problem. This tends to make the book fairly dull and the reader loses interest about fifteen pages

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