I’ve been travelling through space and time a lot this week. I’ve been to the desert planet of Arrakis, 8000 years into the future. I’ve been to late 19th century England and Narnia (again) to watch the world’s beginning and the entrance of evil before it was even 5 hours old. And now, I’ve just returned from a frightening not-to-distant future United States. Oddly enough, they have more in common than just time.
In all three books, Dune, The Magician’s Nephew, and Fahrenheit 451, there is oppressive rulers and the reaching into the minds of people to control their very thoughts. With Dune, the Bene Gesserit wish to control who gets knowledge and sight, who marries whom, and even what sex a child will be. The Harkonnens and Sardukars viciously hunt and kill the Fremen in a pogrom, because the Fremen are independent and refuse to kiss the perverse butts of the disgusting Harkonnen “rulers.”
With The Magician’s Nephew, the Witch destroyed her own world in a bid to control it and take the throne from her sister, using the deplorable word to kill all life except the one who speaks it. Then she tries to take over England, but without her magic, she’s just a violent nutter on a thieving rampage. Once in Narnia, however, she’ll hide and bide her time… then make the move to enslave and opress the land for her own pleasure.
Fahrenheit 451, though, is the one I’ve most recently finished, so the thoughts about it are still tumbling around.
The fun thing with Fahrenheit 451 is that it’s been on Mt. TBR since before there was a Mt. TBR, way back when it was just an “I’m gonna read that soon” pile, when there were maybe 20 books on that pile. I have NO idea how many books are on Mt. TBR now. Library Thing says I have catalogued almost 1000 books, but some of those are books I’ve read, or books I’ve mooched away and NOT read. I have tagged 493 books either unread or TBR, but I’ve gotten lazy and haven’t been tagging any of the books I add, so I’d say Mt. TBR is well over 300 books (simply “unread” don’t count as TBR books).
So, some of my thoughts on Fahrenheit 451…
One of the things that Guy Montag has to do is to decide which book he’ll sacrifice. Captain Beatty knows he took a book and tells him if he turns it in within 24 hours, it’ll be forgiven. Montag’s not sure if Beatty knows he has one book, a hundred books or which title, so he figures if he brings him one book, any book, he’ll pass without suspicion. But how can he choose? He decides not to turn over the last known surviving copy of The Bible, which was a funny moment with his wife, who asked him: Which is more important, me or that book? Der, easy answer…
*SORTA SPOILER ALERT* After running from the police, Montag finds a group of men hobo’ing who have memorized a chapter of a book, or even entire books, and burned the hard copies, and now wait for a time when society will return to it’s senses and want literature again. They half-jokingly introduce themselves as the particular book title, i.e. “Hi! I am Plato’s Republic, and Simmons is Marcus Aurelius.” Knowing how the statement “I am” is an affirmation, and also that the more you say it, the more it takes hold and becomes a truth about you, I wonder who they’ll be in 20 years. Their personalities, and such.
In Fahrenheit 451, Mildred, Montag’s wife, is very attached to her “family,” the people on the television. These “relatives” yell at each other, call each other names, act the fool, and are otherwise “entertaining”. They have a device that allows the owner to hear their own name in messages and shows, and the picture is even adjusted to make the actor’s lips appear to say the name. So that for her, the announcer says, “Mrs. Montag, wouldn’t you love to try Denham’s Dentifrice?” And their living room, or parlor room, has wall-sized screens (remember, this was written in the late 40’s – early 50s), and when you had all 4 of your wall-screens installed, it would be just like being in the show… surrounded by your “family”. Creepy! and sad…
Clarisse McClellen is the oddball neighbor that sets Montag’s feet on the road of awakening. She tells him of how kids her age frighten her. They enjoy killing each other and themselves and destroying things. They go to the “amusement park” and break windows in “Vandalism Town” or drag race legally, as long as they have enough insurance they can destroy whatever they want.
One of Mrs. Montag’s friends tells how she thinks it was nice having kids, and she does her best to accommodate them the 3 days out of a month she has them (the rest of the time they’re away at school… grade schoolers, btw). She just plopped them down in the parlor with the “relatives” as soon as they got home from the hospital. But, she doesn’t know why they hate her. Hmm…
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And now for something completely random and different (because the vid clip I wanted to post is embedding disabled).
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So, If you had to sacrifice one of your books to save the rest, which one would go into the fire?
I’d be tossing the Babysitter’s Club ones… maybe the stray Captain Underpants one I think’s somewhere around here. The Reader’s Digest condensed books could be chucked, too… if they’re still here.
If you were one of the books (which was the vid clip, btw… Montag meeting the Books), what book would you be and why?
It’s a book I’d re-read mentally and recite every day… it’d become a part of me and eventually I’d become that book to an extent…. I think I’d pick the book of Proverbs (Montag was the Book of Ecclesiastes) because it’s wisdom. Everything you need to know about dealing with people, living life, psychology… everything…. is in Proverbs.
Your turn! What book would you sacrifice? Which would you be? Why?
Filed under: Sunday Salon | Tagged: Arakkis, aslan, Babysitter's Club, Beatty, Bene Gesserit, book banning, book burning, book reading, Books, Captain Underpants, censorship, Clarisse McClellen, commercial, Denham's Dentifrice, Dune, Ecclesiastes, evil, Fahrenheit 451, Fremen, funny, Guy Montag, Harkonnen, interactive television, Interview, Jadis, Job, LibraryThing, magic, Marcus Aurelius, meme, memorize, Mildred Montag, Mt. TBR, Narnia, oppression, Pepsi, Pepsi Max, Plato's Republic, pogrom, police, political correctness, Politically Correct, Proverbs, psychology, Random, Reader's Digest, Reader's Digest condensed books, running from the police, sacrifice, Sardukar, tagging, technology, television, The Magician's Nephew, The Sunday Salon, thought police, time travel, unread | 9 Comments »
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Author: Ray Bradbury
Paperback: 191 pages
Date published: 1953
Publisher: Del Rey (div of Random House)
ISBN: 9780345342966
Miscellaneous: This book was first published in 1953, and has since won the National Book Award and the Prometheus Hall of Fame Award. The copy I have is a 50th anniversary edition, and has an interview with Bradbury in the back of the book.
–Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, pages 58-60 (emphasis added)
In the first line of Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, Guy Montag tells us, “It was a pleasure to burn.” Guy is a fireman who loves setting fires and watching things undergo change via the flames. He aims his firehose and sprays the kerosene over the contents of a house and lights the match. A permanent smile is plastered to his face from the hundreds and hundreds of fires he’s set over the ten years he has spent in service to his city. Life for Montag is good and makes sense.
Then a series of events occur that rocks his world. He meets Clarisse McClellen, who is “seventeen and crazy” as she says. She’s been labeled “anti-social” for asking “why?” instead of “how?” and for wanting to connect to people instead of merely co-existing with them. She likes to go on hikes and collect butterflies, and is forced to see a psychiatrist for such odd behaviours. Clarisse’s innocent questions and simple, romantic views on life awakens some long-comotosed awareness in Montag’ssoul. With the question, “Are you happy?” Guy is forced to re-evaluate himself and the world around him. His wife attempts suicide, then goes on pretending it had happened and, in fact, refusing to believe Guy.
The crisis moment for Montag happens when he’s at a house to burn and the older woman chooses to set herself on fire with her books, rather than leaving them. He is forced to question whether it is morally right to destroy something of such value that people are willing to die for them. And if such an act is wrong, what can he, MUST he, do about it?
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Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradburywill have to go on my top 10 list… just not sure which book to bump for it. First off, I love dystopic books, it’s probably my favorite genre. My definition of Dytopia is: Someone’s Utopia is another’s HELL. Second, Fahrenheit 451 speaks to the time it was written, but also has something to say to future generations of readers. It’s a cautionary tale of a possible future, barely imaginable when he wrote it nearly 60 years ago, and frighteningly close to life today. And as I read this, I couldn’t help but feel we did not listen to the warning.
For instance, when Bradbury wrote Fahrenheit 451, wallscreen and battery operated televisions weren’t around. Black and white television itself was in its infancy, but the love of Mrs. Montag’s life is her parlor wallscreens that allow her to be surrounded by her “family”, virtually live and in color. A device allows the people on the shows to insert her name and even look like they’re saying it. A device called a Seashell is worn in the ear, and allows a person to hear music, without disturbing those around them, and Mildred Montagwears hers so often that she’s become a proficient lip-reader. I immediately thought of MP3 players… Sam wears hers so much that she had a meltdown the other day when I told her she couldn’t take it to church with her.
Truly, Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury was prophetic. The society found in within the pages of the book bear a lot of similarities with our culture today. Disconnected from one another, they/we go about with our devices in our ears (Seashell, MP3 player, cell phone, etc) and no longer take the time for conversations with our neighbors and others we meet in passing, and if we do happen to “chat,” it’s shallower than a pie pan.
They/we are so afraid of offending others that the thought police (Firemen or Political Correctness) have made it socially unacceptable, and in some cases criminal, to express ourselves, even monitoring our own self-talk. Free speech? HA! Congress is doing everything they can to eliminate that little inconvenience.
They/we are so obsessed with instant gratification that they/we no longer want to take the time to think about what they/we read, to let it distill in our souls. So books are flatter and more “pastepudding,” as Bradbury calls it, and the average person is no longer able to read and comprehend a newspaper article… not that they actually have the patience to read a whole one, just the headline and first paragraph, then onto the funnies (and even they are getting too long). Supermarket tabloids, Harlequin romance novels, car and sports magazines are the only books found in some homes, and to be “intelligent” is to be reviled.
I don’t say this often, if I’ve ever said it at all, but Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury is a MUST READ. It should be taught in schools and read every year. Oddly enough, this book was actually challenged as part of a school curriculum… A parent wanted to ban a book that is a warning against book banning! How ironic.
Obviously, I give Fahrenheit 451 5 out of 5 stars. READ IT!
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Filed under: Book Reviews | Tagged: 20th century, American, American classic, banned book, Beatty, big screen TV, book banning, book burning, Books, cautionary tale, censorship, cigarette smoking, Clarisse McClellen, critical thinking, dysfunctional, dystopia, dystopic, Faber, fiction, future, Guy Montag, hedonism, interactive television, Little Black Sambo, lung cancer, minorities, MP3 player, P.C., phoenix, Politically Correct, politics, prophetic, salamander, scary but true, sci-fi classic, Science Fiction, social commentary, society, special interests, speculative, thinking, thought police, tobacco, Uncle Tom's Cabin, warning, World War | 5 Comments »