Pages

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Rebuilding Alone


Rebuilding Alone
 Imagine having to rebuild and restore civilization to an area that has been destroyed by a bomb during a reckless war. Guy Montag, from Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, experiences this incredible undertaking firsthand, after a bomb is dropped on his hometown. Montag and others start the rebuilding process in hopes of creating a less controlling government. Although he has practically no resources to work with, Montag does have special friends with exceptional knowledge they previously memorized from books. This knowledge enables Montag and his friends to access a great number of lessons and teachings in order to help them create a more democratic government.
Throughout Fahrenheit 451, the government controls the city and its people by not allowing citizens to obtain, read, or own books. The government believes they are protecting people from the contents of stories that may offend them. However, Montag believes the government has gone overboard in controlling the people by removing books from their lives. Therefore, while Guy is working as a fireman, his curiosity of books inspires him to salvage what books he comes across. For this reason, I believe Montag and his friends will rebuild their city with hopes that people will live by their own free will.
Bradbury suddenly ends Fahrenheit 451 as Guy Montag witnesses a bomb being dropped on the city. When his life unexpectedly flashes before his eyes, Montag realizes everything in its entirety is gone. What I presume would happen afterward is Montag would attempt to recover anything he can find from his life before the bombing. Also, I believe Montag and his rural friends will go back into the city to rebuild what they can. It will be up to them to reconstruct the city they once called home in a more democratic way by allowing books to be part of the people’s lives. Although Montag might not have the resources he has the heart to at least try to reconstruct what was once a great city.
Guy Montag’s situation in Fahrenheit 451 is similar to a scene in The Roar, by Emma Clayton. In The Roar everyone in the world is forced to move into the northern third of the world behind a giant wall while the wealthiest people are allowed to stay in the remaining two thirds of the beautiful world. When a young boy realizes this, he tries to rally together as many children as he can to reclaim the world for everyone to enjoy. This is similar to Fahrenheit 451 because both characters try to regain, or rebuild the world the way they learned it had once been.
                Guy Montag is faced with the seemingly insurmountable problem of reconstructing the city.  He and his friends each use the lessons they have learned from the books they memorized to recreate a peaceful and democratic life for everyone in the city.

Monday, November 19, 2012

The Beast Ending

Authors Note: This piece is a prediction of the end The Beast, a short story we read in the Reading Lab.

     When Steven turns around he sees a gigantic beast even bigger and scarier than he expected. Wait he thought this isn't a beast it's just Chance. "There you are Chance!" Steven would shout. "I was looking all over for you. You scared me." Most story's that have cases like these end up not causing any trouble just a large misunderstanding, which would be the same case as with The Beast .

     I was very wrong with my prediction. I thought that he wasn't going to get hurt at all and Chance was the beast. But in the end Steven did get mauled by the beast.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Burning Up

Authours Note: This is a Character/Analysis piece on Guy Montag from Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury.

Burning Up


                        Guy Montag had always burned books. It was the only thing he knew how to do in his average life. Everyone around him expected firemen to burn books, until one day Montag met a young woman named Clarisse. While Montag talked with Clarisse he transformed as a man and decided to make a difference.
                In Fahrenheit 451 Guy first met Clarisse on the side of the street while heading home from work. He didn’t have a very good outlook on life because he felt controlled by the government. Clarisse questioned Guy about the role of firefighters in previous generations. Guy thought everything had always been the same as what he had experienced in his life. Firemen burning books and people with boring, lackadaisical lives with no motivation to make a difference were two things Montag witnessed as a firefighter. Clarisse motivated Guy to discover what books had to offer. However, when Clarisse suddenly dies and her family disappears, Guy is torn knowing he will no longer be able to share his perspective with Clarisse.
                On a normal night before Montag and his fellow firefighters begin to burn a house down, they ask a woman to leave her house. As a sign of her love and respect for books, the woman stays in her home while the fire rages. Montag wonders what could be so good about books that the woman would burn and die for them. While processing this thought, Guy removes a book from the woman’s house to take back home so he can discover the wonders of its contents. After arriving home, Guy’s wife, Mildred, discovered the book and attempted to throw it into the incinerator. Montag worked up the courage to reveal to his wife that he had many stolen books stored in the attic. Upon discovering this Mildred tries to throw the entire collection of books into the incinerator. Guy is then able to talk his wife out of burning the books and calms her down so they can read the books together. At this moment, Guy realized his life had changed dramatically because of his encounters with Clarisse.
                Montag’s development in Fahrenheit 451 reminded me of Luke Garner from Among the Hidden. In Among the Hidden, Luke lives in a world where parents are only allowed two children, but Luke is the third child of his family. He is forced to live inside his home so he is not detected by the government. After thinking he has seen another hidden child in an adjacent home, Luke decides to sneak out of his house. Luke meets the girl he saw hidden, and learns they must help rescue all third children hiding from the government. In the beginning of Among the Hidden, Luke was a scared, modest boy who did not believe his life could impact others. By the end of the book, Luke realizes he must help others and becomes a hero just like Guy.
                Guy Montag was a very dynamic character in Fahrenheit 451 He started off as a man who had little motivation and direction, and later realized he had vital things to do with his life. Guy went on and accomplished many tasks he would not have been able to if he hadn’t met Clarisse, and developed throughout the book.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Casey's embarrassment

Authors Note: This is a analyzing of Casey from Casey at the Bat.    

  Casey will change because he tried to show off but he ended up getting shown up by the other team. He won't just let the ball go by in the future because it's not his style, he will do his best to hit the ball each and every time. He wants to earn the fans trust back by winning some games and proving that he is still Mudville's best player. This situation is like the book Life of Pi when Pi is lets his family down because he didn't save them from the boat. At the end of the story he wants to live 
for his parents and brother so he can prove that he's worth it.