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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A concise study guide for Bradbury's dystopian novel, October 12, 2003
This review is from: Spark Notes Fahrenheit 451 (Paperback)
The SparkNotes were created by Harvard students, which means that these little black and blue books tend to be more streamlined than their yellow and black Cliffs Notes counterparts. In the case of Ray Bradbury's classic dystopian fable "Fahrenheit 451," the tradeoffs are fairly specific. You will not get a look at either the novel as an example of dystopian fiction or in the context of Bradbury's writing in the prolific period after World War II, but you will get a series of important quotations from the novel explained and a series of multiple-choice questions that will help test your knowledge. Even though this study guide was written by students for students, SparkNotes manages to avoid doing the work for the students. The summary sections are rather concise and both the analysis provided of various sections of the novel (each of the three parts of "Fahrenheit 451" is broken into at least two parts) as well as the sections establish key themes, motifs, and symbols, provide introductions to these key concepts rather than laying out entire analytical arguments. If you are a student you will find that this study guide points you in several profitable directions but still leaves doing the actual analysis and argumentation up to you.

You will find analyses of the four main characters (Guy Montag, Mildred Montage, Captain Beatty, and Professor Faber) as well as a list offering a brief description of all the important characters, and then two major analytical sections. The first looks at the themes (censorship and knowledge versus ignorance), motifs (paradoxes, animal and natural imagery, religion), and key symbols (blood, "the hearth and the salamander," "the sieve and the sand," the phoenix, and mirrors). The second, as mentioned above, provides a summary and analysis of the three parts of the novels. In the back of this study guide you will find five important quotations explained, key facts, study questions and essay topics, and review and resource materials. Since I prefer to set up the idea of a dystopian novel as well as the evolution of this idea in Bradbury's writings myself for my students I do not especially mind that these elements are touched upon only briefly in the opening section looking at the context of "Fahrenheit 451." SparkNotes provides a concise study guide for Bradbury's classical science fiction novel, which is exactly what it promises to provide.

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Spark Notes Fahrenheit 451
Spark Notes Fahrenheit 451 by SparkNotes Editors (Paperback - January 10, 2002)
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