Fahrenheit 451 Continuation This is an extended ending, taking place after the conclusion of the book itself. Not written in Ray Bradbury’s style. It was almost noon, and Montag could see the plumes of smoke rising like chimneys. The silence left by the blast, the silence felt back at the camp, still remained. Montag knew that they’d be needed in finding and helping any survivors of the explosion, if there were any. Everything was gone. All that was left was debris on the outside of the former city, and mainly dust in the centre. What should have been there: skyscrapers, hotels, fire stations, were no longer a sight of the city, just a huge expanse of dust and debris, a complete alien world. As they followed the river closer to the …show more content…
‘Yes, we’re the same, we’re all people exiled from our homes as a result of a corrupt world, but we’ve got to get out and start looking for more survivors; hopefully we can salvage some material and build shelters for the night.’ ‘Good idea,’ said Granger. The group was about to set off, but there was a groan, and suddenly, the mechanical hound was ahead, mangled and twisted, but just as genuinely frightening as before. ‘Run,’ said Montag, quietly at first. ‘Run!’ They all turned in unison and dashed, the hound giving chase. The sounds of their footsteps were the only sounds they could hear, possibly the only sound in many miles in any direction. The hound was silent, and this provided a false sense of safety. Granger slowed and turned, the hound pounced on his leg, the needle protracting. Montag had a look of horror as he ran back to his friend, no sooner than they had all set off, and kicked the creature with his heavy boots. The same boots he had worn as a fireman, he hadn’t even noticed. The hound was destroyed, but as for Granger, Montag wasn’t sure. Granger fell back, clutching his leg. Montag caught him. Granger was still conscious. The hound couldn’t have injected enough of its lethal cocktail. Granger gasped for air. ‘Hold on Granger,’ said Montag in desperation. Granger’s eyes closed, and his body went limp. Montag checked for a pulse. There was nothing. Montag attempted to revive him. Still there
Montag spends the rest of the rainy afternoon uneasily reading through books while Millie sits idly. As he reads, Montag is often reminded of Clarisse. Meanwhile, the already edgy couple is alarmed by a scratching at the door. Millie dismisses it as "just a dog", but Montag knows it is the Mechanical Hound. Luckily, the Hound leaves without causing a disturbance. Millie whines that there is no reason to read books and that that their house will be burned down if anyone finds out. Montag responds with a passionate rant, asserting that they really have no concept of what is going on in the world and that those who seek to learn are quickly quieted, just like Clarisse and the old woman. He talks of the ongoing wars and how people all over the
Fahrenheit 451 is an important book about the perception of the future if books were inaccessible. This book is also a valuable piece of literature because it explains to the readers that after reading a book you can gain more knowledge and everyone else.
Ban books or burn them? Ray Bradbury wrote his famous novel Fahrenheit 451 in 1953 fantasizing about a world in which books were banned, and when a book was found it was burnt and destroyed. Little did he know that his thought of books being banned could actually happen and that it would be one of his own. Today Fahrenheit 451 is being banned and challenged in schools all across America. How ironic that a book about books being banned is now being banned around the country. A prize winning book by a prize winning author is now being questioned as to whether it is a good book to teach in an English class. Though Fahrenheit 451 may contain controversial elements such as language, discussion of
Finally arriving at Faber's house, Montag is told about a group of exiled intellectuals who will give him refuge. Through careful planning and determination, he manages to stay ahead of the new and improved Mechanical Hound, who is trying to hunt him down and destroy him. By jumping into the river and floating downstream, Montag cannot be detected by either the Hound or the helicopters. He finally comes ashore by a forest and finds the exiles within. They welcome Montag into their midst and share their plans of saving books and knowledge with him. Montag is given the Biblical book of Ecclesiastes to memorize.
Fahrenheit 451 is a dystopian novel by American writer Ray Bradbury, published in 1953. The novel describes a futuristic society in which books are outlawed and "firemen" burn any that are found. The protagonist is a fireman named Montag who becomes perturbed with his role in censorship and destruction of knowledge, eventually quitting his job and joining a resistance movement that memorizes and shares the world's greatest literary works. As Montag struggles over the value of knowledge, he becomes a skeptical, rebellious and dynamic person, driving him to the fringes of society in pursuit of an absolute truth.
The book “Fahrenheit 451” by Ray Bradbury was about a fireman name Guy Montag. Montag does the opposite from what regular fireman do. He starts fires instead of putting them out. Books in Montag's society is forbidden to read and if caught reading the book would be set on fire. Instead of reading, that society watches large amounts of television as big as the wall and listens to the radio attached to their ears. It was not normal for pedestrians to talk and have meaningful conversations until Montag met a teenager name Clarisse. Clarisse was a strange girl that opened up Montag thoughts. She asked him about his work and what made him become a fireman. One question that really got him to think was the statement “Are you happy”(Bradbury 10). Montag believed that Clarisse was odd. She wasn’t like the norm of the society. She read books, walked the city like a pedestrian and, had meaningful conversations. After that encounter with Clarisse a number of events started to happen to him; his wife Mildred tried to commit suicide with prescription pills, a woman that hid books in her home decides to burn a live with her books, and Clarisse is killed in a car accident., With all these tragic events occuring, Montag tries to find a solution to this epidemic. The society has become controlled from power, a sense of censorship. Bradbury has shown his viewpoint of society through this novel.
"It was a pleasure to burn". In the novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, the main
After taking Honors Written and Oral Communication freshman year I have changed as a communicator. I have grown in many areas as a writer and speaker; however, I have also have skills that need improvement. From the Fahrenheit 451 essay to the six-word memoir, my writing capabilities and experience has changed. I have sincerely grown in certain areas whereas I have also fell short in other areas.
11. Montag’s society programs thoughts so completely that “firemen are rarely necessary”. The firemen are used for burning books, to make sure that no one in the society reads or owns them. The firemen aren’t really necessary because the society already doesn’t read books or seem to care about them. They are in the world of technology and don’t want to gain knowledge or have anything to do with learning new information or facing the real world. Montag’s society programs their thoughts to have fun and be care-free. Books are something they already naturally don’t want to read or think about. This is why the firemen aren’t really necessary.
Ray Bradbury’s novel, Fahrenheit 451, differentiates from the cinematic form of the novel directed by François Truffaut in numerous ways. Bradbury states, “The movie was a mixed blessing. It didn’t follow the novel as completely as it should have. “It’s a good movie: it has a wonderful ending; it has a great score by Bernard Hermann. Oskar Werner is wonderful in the lead. But Truffaut made the mistake of putting Julie Christie in two roles in the same film, which was very confusing, and he eliminated some of the other characters: Clarisse McClellan and Faber the Philosopher and the Mechanical Hound. I mean, you can’t do without those!” Other than the characters in the story, including the score
The exposition of this book is very spread out. We find out that Montag is a fireman(and what that entails), his name, and we meet Clarisse in the first four pages. Then, on page five, Clarisse introduces the idea of Montag reading the books(which of course is illegal) and asks the question “are you happy”(Bradbury, 7). This introduces the main conflict of the story. However, the more important main characters like Mildred and Beatty aren’t introduced until page nine and page twenty-five. Lastly, the setting isn’t really plainly introduced in the book or given a name. It’s just a city in the twenty-fourth century that is very close to the war that is happening throughout the book.
Have you ever done something that you got away with, but for only a short period of time? The main character, Guy Montag, in Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 hides books in his house. In this society, it is against the rules to have books anywhere. Montag gets books, shows them to his wife, Mildred; and even reads them to her friends. Mildred turns in Montag and the alarm goes off. When the alarm went off the firemen came to Montag’s house, which led to Mildred leaving, Montag killing Beatty, and the mechanical hound.
The article written by Sarah Maslin Nir and William K. Rashbaum in the New York Times, talks about a bomber who tried to detonate a bomb in one of Manhattan’s busiest subways. The bomb did go off but not fully and Akayed Ullah, 27, who was identified by a policeman, was the only was who was badly injured.
2. Montag goes to Faber 's house where he learns a new hound is on his trail.
(Watt 41). Bradbury reinforces this contrast by causing Mildred to relate only to the subject of herself, while Clarisse's favorite subject is other people. When Montag meets the Mechanical Hound, he discovers that it is a "dead beast, [a] living beast" (Bradbury 24). Donald Watt describes it as a "striking and sinister gadget" and it "is most terrifying for being both alive and not alive" (41; Huntington 113). The Hound becomes "Montag's particular mechanical enemy [and it] becomes more suspicious of him" as time passes and Montag develops a greater freedom from his society (Johnson 112). Thus, Montag is thrust into the realization that his culture is not flawless, but instead is rife with abuses of human freedoms.