Books like Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451
Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451
Back in my undergraduate days I was lucky enough to hear Ray Bradbury speak in person. (He was a keynote speaker at a conference for college newspaper staffers). He was so funny and so inspirational that decades later I still have the notes I took during his speech and during the workshop the next day. This dynamic and imaginative man has given us loads of fascinating and creepy books and stories (and inspired me to write a few lesser efforts of my own). I loved The Martian Chronicles and Dandelion Wine, and always looked forward to reading Fahrenheit 451, especially since I knew it was made into a 1966 movie. Now, admittedly, the burned-out future described in this book still has the look and feel of cheezy, 1960s pop culture. Nevertheless, the whole idea of a society that bans and burns books because they are the source of ideas and individuality is sobering in any time period. Bradbury's book is a quick read, but it has a lot of thought-provoking ideas and downright scary points of view about to what extremes a dictatorial society may evolve and how ordinary people can rise to the seemingly impossible task of combatting the hysteria and preserving the literature of the present and of centuries past.