Analysis Of Fahrenheit 451, By Ray Bradbury

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Who would have ever thought that books would become socially unacceptable. Ray Bradbury believes that our society has the ability to reach that type of insanity. In his award winning novel, Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury creates a society where life is unimportant and books are irrelevant. To own a book of their own, the characters had to be incredibly secretive. The secrecy that one specific character, Guy Montag, had to evoke caused intense problems in a technology based society of people totally against books.
Bradbury's fictional society believed that books were pointless. People hated and feared all books because books were known to "show the pores in the face of life." Everyone in this society allows technology to run their lives because