How Did Montag Changes In Fahrenheit 451

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There are “worthless” items that some of us try to destroy, but then realize that the items are essential at some points in our life. According to the novel “Fahrenheit 451” written by Ray Bradbury, Guy Montag, a fireman, who destroy books instinctively. After a girl named Clarisse asked him about his feelings toward his jobs, he then realizes that he has to value everything he had, including books, to acknowledge what happiness is. Throughout the protagonist’s journey, Montag changes from a book killer to someone who tries to preserve literary books, and his changes links to the theme, which is to value and/or use everything you have and can have.

At the beginning of the novel, Montag enjoys burning any books that come in his way and what his job gives him, until something wrong happened during his job. According to the novel, after the incident that burn the whole house of Mrs. Blake and Mrs. Blake herself during an attempt to confiscate and incinerate her books, Montag felt
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For instance, Montag seeks help from Faber, a retired English professor that he met and interacted with before, had given him the way to interpret books, “...Number one, as I said, quality of information, Number two: leisure to digest it. And number three: the right to carry out the actions based on what we learned from the interaction of the first two…” (Bradbury 80). In other words, if Montag were to follow these steps, which is to find relevant facts, understand and analyze the facts, and experiment the facts in real life, he might gain knowledge from this that can figure out what is wrong with him, his job, and his society. This links to the theme because he now values what his society wastes, books, and he use it to his advantage, which is to find