Joe Montag lives in a strange time. But according to Ray Bradbury this
is the future, 2022. Seashell Radios, a device that resembles iPod,
are best past time and accompanist. Atomic wars are declared and won in a
day. Relatives are characters in episodes of T.V. programs. Children
are snatched from parents at an early age because people are not born to
be free and equal but they are "made equal. Each man the image of every
other; then all are happy, for there are no mountains to make them
cower, to judge themselves against." Books are burnt and those who
possess a book are arrested. Alarms are there to notify the police of
the crime of reading, owning a book. Firefighters, they are "the
Happiness Boys…." They "stand against the small tide of those who want
to make everyone unhappy with conflicting theory and thought." They
"have our fingers in the dike. Hold steady. Don’t let the torrent of
melancholy and drear philosophy drown our world.”
Joe Montag is a
married firefighter. His life is the very definition of status quo.
Up until he meets Clarisse McClellan, who claims to be seventeen and
insane. "Are you happy?", she asks. She is unlike anyone Joe Montag
has met before. She thinks about everything and anything. She is
interested in others.
Montag a complacent resident, all of a
sudden feels uneasy in his environment. He questions his own action.
Why does he burn books? What is in them?
The shrewd, hateful
supervisor, Captain Beatty, does all in his power to dissuade Montag
questioning things. But he can't stop Montag. But in the end he fails
and it is with these words he condemns him.
“Now, Montag, you’re a
burden. And fire will lift you off my shoulders, clean, quick, sure;
nothing to rot later. Antibiotic, aesthetic, practical.”— Beatty
But
could there be hope? One man's moment of weakness is the other's
opportunity to gain strength.