I read this book about 18 months ago, but I am writing a review now because the book came up during a mealtime conversation. We talked about how prophetic a very good science fiction writer can be. This is definitely the case in Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451. Guy Montag lives in a world that represses freedom of speech, creativity, and the core of human spirit. People, including his estranged wife, are drones glued to these pseudo realities in television. It describes senseless trivia shows (can anyone say “Who wants to be a millionaire?”) and awfully realistic soap operas that his wife affectionatly refers to as the “family.”
What is most disturbing is that as televisions and technology become more “artificially intelligent” we will face some of the brainless drivel (we already do) that the major media networks provide us.
As a fireman, Guy Montag starts fires with books as the culprit – rather than putting them out. The idea is that books can make some people feel bad and as a result we should get rid of them – in other words books can be controversial and our country does not need disputes. The enforcer is a mechanical dog (which I found a little unrealistic and distracting) that injects a lethal poison into any opponents. Despite the silliness of the mechanical dog – the underlying theme is fantastic – open your mind and save the beauty of spontaneity and creativity of the human spirit.







