Guy Montag lived in the 24th century, a time where books were forbidden, and if you had any, firemen would burn your house down to the ground, books and all. Guy was one of those firemen. He never questioned it, it was just the way everyone worked. He never thought of what books could hold. One unusual day, Guy met an interesting girl named Clarisse McClellan. She showed Guy the wonderful things in the world that he had never noticed before. He began to like the way she looked at things and enjoyed her company. Suddenly, life turned around for Guy. His wife tried to kill herself with sleeping pills, although it was unsuccessful, and then he had to respond to a fire alarm, in which the old woman chose to be burned alive with her books, rather …show more content…
After hearing all these wonderful things about books, he devised a plan to allow them in the society once again. Professor Faber thought he was crazy, but Guy was insistent. Reluctantly, the Professor agreed. Guy and Professor Faber contacted a publisher, reproduced books again, and started putting them inside of the firemen’s houses, so people wouldn’t trust them. Professor Faber gave Guy a two-way earpiece so he could listen to the conversation. Once he got home, Guy found his wife and her friends gossiping and watching the news about a war that would break out sometime soon. For some reason he got angry at the superficiality of the women, so he started to read them a poem called “Dover Beach”. His wife tried to explain to her friends that this was just a way for firemen to express the uselessness of literature, but the women were so disturbed so they filed a complaint against Guy. The next day, when Guy went to the fire station, he turned in the books to Captain Beatty. He was surprised when the Captain asked him quotes and questions about the book, but he was suddenly interrupted when the fire alarm went off. Only this time, it was for Guy’s house. He realized that his own wife had left and betrayed him. “I should have never had trusted her.” he
She doesn’t know how to handle it, so not long after she goes behind her husbands back and turns him into the firemen. When the alarm sounds the next day and they hurry over to the destination, Montag realises that they had stopped at his house. He runs inside to retrieve the books to burn them but then Betty, the chief of the firemen, says that he would be arrested for his actions. Montag freaks out and ends up killing Betty along with the rest of his group.
The parlour walls are considered relatives of those who watch them and people enjoy their company. Books are free of censorship and express real raw feelings. Montag’s encounter with the old man was unique and made him question his position as a fireman. He knew that the old man was carrying a book nevertheless, he did not report the man. Instead, he stayed at the old man’s side and talked with him.
Guy Montag lives in the "future" as a fireman. He is not an ordinary fireman though. Him and his crew member burn books, they start fires instead of stop them. In Montag's world not one person thinks for them self, or can enjoy anything other than electronics. Books were banned to avoid confrontation of any form.
Then, Montag meets a woman who loved her books so much that she decided to burn with her books. Finally, Montag found out that Clarisse died because she got hit by a car. After all of these incidents the fireman is thoroughly confused. Montag tried to find the answer to his problems in the books that he had hidden in the furnace, and decided not to go to work. Noticing the fireman had not come to work the fire chief, Captain Beatty, decided to visit Montag.
While piling books together and starting a fire, Montag and his fellow fireman discover an old woman who refuses to leave the book-ridden house. Montag has no choice but to burn the old lady with her books. This death effects Guy more than it ever had before because of how Clarisse opened his mind about books and thinking in general, which leads to Montag collapsing into his bed at home in tears. Before meeting Clarisse, Montag would’ve killed the woman without another thought and returned home smiling, enjoying how bright and colorful the flames
A very prime event in the story is when Beaty comes to Guy Montag's house looking for a book after being rated out by his wife and her friend. " ‘... Go ahead now, you second-hand literateur, pull the trigger." [Beaty] took one step toward Montag. Montag only said, "We never burned right..." "Hand it over, Guy," said Beatty with a fixed smile.
There is a profession in the city called “firefighters.” These firefighters do not put out fires, but rather start homes on fire which are believed to have books inside of them. The main character, Montag, eventually succumbs to curiosity and keeps some books for himself, which ultimately sets the stage for the climax of the book. If I were in Montag’s situation, I might want to see what is inside books if I had never read one before.
On his way home, Guy feels as though he’s being followed, like there was a presence where he was looking, he recounts it as the air being warm. He meets Clarisse McClellan, a girl that not only makes him feel uncomfortable, but points out that firemen didn’t always begin fires. Clarisse’s words make Guy question his happiness as well. When he arrives at his home, he realizes that perhaps he was never happy. His wife, Mildred seems
As Guy explains the burning of the woman in her own house’s fire to a confused Mildred, he realizes, “There must be something in books, something we can’t imagine, to make a woman stay in a burning house; there must be something there. You don’t stay for nothing” (Bradbury 48). Books have been banned, meaning no one is able to gain knowledge from them, and any remaining books must be burned. Guy realizes that books must hold significant importance if the woman was willing to give her life in protest of the burning of her books. Montag describes the idea of the content of the books as “something we can’t imagine,” showing that he and other people in his society are so out of touch with literature that they cannot fathom what it expresses.
Her curiosity and ability to ask daring questions conveys the idea that she is actually wondering about what life could possibly be like with books and how this could cause everyone on earth to benefit from it. After her death, Clarisse's imagination inspires Guy Montag to discover more about books and why they are banned. Guy's occupation as a fireman indicates that he should be against the use of books. Nevertheless, he realizes that books contain very significant information that could improve the lives of earth's inhabitants. He risked his career and life by taking and reading books, "We can't burn these.
Further into the story Guy is at the fire station with Captain Beatty, the antagonist, and a few other coworkers when someone who is against the burning of books attacks them. Montag gets sent to the hospital because he somehow got poisoned and after recovery, he finds out Clarisse died. This drives him into doing things that were not expected from him. If I were telling a friend about the entire story in two minutes I would start by telling them that the main character, Guy Montag, is a firefighter who lives in a world where books are burned. I would then tell them only all the
After the incident, Montag thought about the suicidal woman and he is confused as to why she would sacrifices her own life for some mere books. Since he’ve been told that books are evil, a spark of curiosity blooms within him. In part two, Montag is desperate for help. After his boss, Beatty, talks to him about the history of firemen and books, Montag is afraid that Beatty knows that he stole a book.
The book follows Guy Montag, a fireman who sets things on fire instead of put out fires. He enjoys his job until on one job an old woman decides to burn with her books rather than evacuate. Haunted by her death, Montag becomes confused on why books would mean so much to anyone. He then decides to find out for himself by reading books from a personal stash of stolen books. Montag has a personal revolution; he realizes the dangers of restricting information and intellectual thought.
Guy Montag stood to the side of the burning house, watching thick, black smoke billow out from the windows and cracks of the house. He caught a glimpse of a stack of books burning and taking the knowledge contained within up in the flames. Guy did not know why he was commanded to burn the “forbidden” books, just that he mustn’t question those who told him to do so. Guy waited patiently until the fire burned down, and then proceeded to board his truck and leave the scene. He looked out his rear-view mirror at the remains of the blackened house, somewhere within there lie that stack of books, now nothing more than ashes.
A house was on fire and there was a woman inside it with her books. She refused to let go of them and leave the house. The woman’s actions led to Montag thinking differently about everything and was telling his wife that there may be something important in books. c. The quotation