Currently, I am 114 pages into Fahrenheit 451 and the book has been so interesting so far that I want to keep turning the pages! I wanted to take some time to discuss the setting of the novel. In our story, we are living through the life Guy Montag. The setting, to me, is something that is hard to pin point what it actually is. The world is like ours but its more futuristic in their technology and war is something that was more present. Form what the text states, I imagine the world to look like ours but be more modern and updated. People are more tuned into their newest technology gadgets and appliances than each other. The setting goes between the season of fall with Montag's futuristic house, to the firehouse that houses the frightening hound, and outside when Montag would walk with Clarisse, which is one of the only times where the world seemed normal. "The autumn leaves blew over the moonlit pavement in such a way as to make the girl who was moving there seemed fixed to a sliding walk, lepton the motion of the wind and the leaves carry her forward." This was one of the scenes that changed Montag's life in the book.
Clarisse McClellan, from the book Fahrenheit 451, is one of our main characters in the beginning in the book and abruptly leaves the story and goes missing. She makes an impact on Guy Montag's way of thinking in our story and it impacts him so much that it changes his whole view on books all together. She is a very special and kind hearted character in our story which is very different compared to our other characters. The author creates Clarisse with very kind and soft features that makes her approachable which is what makes Guy Montag approach her the first night. Our first use of direct characterization of Clarisse McClellan is on page three, "Her Head was half bent to watch her shoes stir in circling leaves. Her face was slender and milk-white, and in it was a kind of gentle hunger that touched over everything with tireless curiosity. It was a look, almost, of pale surprise; the dark eyes were so fixed to the world that no move escaped them. Her dress was ...
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