This summer I read two pieces of Ray Bradbury. Both are very well, very well written. These novels are Fahrenheit 451 and Mars Chronicles. In fact, "Mars Chronicle" is actually like a set of short stories. What these two books have in common is what Mr. Bradbury thought when writing these books. His future lies in his mind. He saw the deepest part of the future. One example is that he allowed us to participate in war and Martian war before 2000.
- Ray Bradbury wrote two completely different novels in the beginning of the Cold War. The first one is Mars Chronicle (1950) and Fahrenheit 451 (1953). During the Cold War, the similarity of Martian themes combined with the state of the American heart, outlined the two novels on the surface. Furthermore, as he said in an interview with David Mogen in 1980, Bradbury "is hindering the future." Among these two books, the orthotopic society is also the subject, but in order to familiarize readers to Budberry's optimism in the story, it is done side by side. ...
In Ray Bradbury's novel Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury warned society against censorship, antisocial elements and technology dangers. Ray Bradbury wrote Fahrenheit 451 in the 50 year war known as the Cold War and his novel reflects the state of Communism if it can reach Western countries. - Written in 1948, George Orwell's "1984" shows the government's negligence on a novel of sight loss. Orwell depicts an autocratic society in which the government uses mind games, misunderstanding the citizens of that country by changing the past. Due to the lack of individualism, people act according to government orders, and family concept no longer exists.
Fahrenheit 451 Future forecast of Ray Bradbury TREVOUR YOUNF Fahrenheit 451 is a dystopia novel written by Ray Bradbury depicting the future American society, books are prohibited, independent thoughts are persecuted ing. Brad Berry scrutinizes the world consumed by the technology making full use of his imagination and proposes fun, violent and anti-intelligent prophecies that are surprisingly similar to modern American society. It is worth noting that people have found in both societies. Symbol of Fahrenheit 451 Ray Bradbury, probably one of the most famous science fiction novels, he wrote a wonderful novel "Fahrenheit 451". This novel is about "Guy Montag" firefighter who creates fire instead of destroying them. One night to burn the book (Wat 2) when he returned home from work, he met a young girl stirring the idea and curiosity that he did not have anyone in front of him. She told him that the firefighters are not shooting guns, but the world where they started reading with people.