From the Bookshelf of Overdue Podcast…
Find A Copy At
Group Discussions About This Book
No group discussions for this book yet.
What Members Thought

Fahrenheit 451 takes place in a society where houses are fireproof (unlike the “stick houses” of today) and the job of the fire department is to start fires not stop them. Specifically the job of the fire department is to burn books. I’m not sure entirely why. There was something about preventing inequality and unhappiness but that seems like a cop out on so many levels. Even if Bradbury was trying to play devil’s advocate nothing about that argument makes sense.
I wish I had read Fahrenheit 451 ...more
I wish I had read Fahrenheit 451 ...more

Maybe there's still hope for me, since I've finally read a Bradbury book I wholeheartedly enjoyed. Halloween Tree was good, but not great. Something Wicked was an exercise in tedium, poorly written dialogue, and prose so purple it could easily have replaced seashells as a source of dye for royalty.
I still think his prose gets in the way of the story, although much less so here than in Something Wicked. Some of the descriptions were a little overwrought, but nothing too bad at all. More important ...more
I still think his prose gets in the way of the story, although much less so here than in Something Wicked. Some of the descriptions were a little overwrought, but nothing too bad at all. More important ...more

In the 8th grade I had a teacher who was a fanatic Ray Bradbury fan. I wasn't overly fond of her so by proxy I couldn't get myself to be overly fond of Mr. Bradbury. I'd always heard about Fahrenheit 451 but had never read it. I've read a couple of Ray Bradbury's books over the years and I'm always so impressed by either his foresight in the inventions and standards of the future or the way his ideas were taken and built upon to get us where we are today.
With all of the talk of books being a thi ...more
With all of the talk of books being a thi ...more

There was some excellent prose in this book and a lot to empathise with. Considering it was published in 1953 it felt unnervingly prescient of the world of today, what with the gigantic TV screens and the dehumanising effect of modern media, not to mention the blame for the destruction of literature being laid at the foot of the people rather than with any government. But there were aspects of the book itself that felt a bit off, especially how the last section kind of both tapers off and reveal
...more

May 30, 2012
Natasha Curulli
marked it as to-read


Apr 24, 2014
Rosemary Lauryn
rated it
did not like it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
really-didn-t-like


Aug 24, 2016
Paola
marked it as to-read