The Necessity of Memory: Fahrenheit 451

The Necessity of Memory: Fahrenheit 451

Ballantine 1953, Joseph Mugnaini

 

As 2025 ended, I thought about the reading I would do in the new year ahead and decided that in 2026, I would place an emphasis on rereading. In fact, I vowed that I wouldn’t read a new book without first rereading an old one. A week before New Year’s I jotted down likely titles for this project, and one of the first I thought of is a book I last read a lifetime ago, in 1974 or 75, when I was in high school — Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451. Back then, I didn’t much like it.

This time, I set aside my half-century old initial reaction and approached the book with an open mind. So, how was it a quarter of the way into the twenty-first century? I still wouldn’t call it an entirely successful book, but at least now I’m better equipped to understand what Bradbury was doing and can more justly assess the book’s strengths and weaknesses.

You’re probably familiar with the novel’s premise, which is one of the most famous in science fiction. Sometime in the near future (the book was published in 1953, so we’re probably well past whatever date Bradbury had in mind), in an unnamed city, Guy Montag lives in his comfortable, suburban, technologically up-to-date house with his wife Millie. Millie spends most of her time… watching isn’t quite the right word… submitting, maybe, to the immersive, individually tailored programs that flash from three of their four living room walls, which can morph into gigantic television screens. Guy mostly just watches Millie; for some reason, the shows don’t entertain him. They just make him uneasy.

Guy begins to think more about this uneasiness after a chance meeting with a new neighbor. Clarisse McClellan is a young woman who lives next door with her “peculiar” (Clarisse’s word) family. Like Guy, they don’t watch the programs, but they do several things that neither Guy nor anyone else does; they take walks, they look at things, the grass and the flowers and the stars, they know about the past, and… they talk to each other. Incredulous at first, Guy begins to look forward to seeing Clarisse; though their conversations disturb him, she somehow seems more alive than anyone he knows. When the girl is killed in an auto accident and her family moves away, Guy is surprised to discover how much this upsets him; now all he has left is his work.

Guy is a fireman.

He is a fireman with a difference, though, a fireman who doesn’t put fires out. That kind of fireman isn’t needed any more, as all buildings are now completely fireproof. Instead of extinguishing fires, Guy and his crew start them; their hoses spray, not water, but kerosene, which is then ignited by the firemen themselves, hence the book’s striking first line: “It was a pleasure to burn.”

Ballantine 1980, Barron Storey

When the alarm rings in the firehouse, the fire crews of Bradbury’s upside-down world pile into the firetruck and rush out to burn books, which are the seeds from which discontent and disaffection spring. (Book paper catches fire at 451 degrees Fahrenheit, which explains the novel’s title.)

During the brief course of the story (my 1968 Ballantine paperback is not quite 150 pages long), because of his talks with Clarisse (and an extremely disturbing call, when a woman chose to be burned along with her books rather than leave her house), Guy comes to perceive the insanity of his society and of his role in it and finally chooses to separate himself from it. He ends as an exile, living with a group of vagabonds in the open country beyond the stifling cities, where they can keep the past alive. (They all have memorized various books, in part or in whole, and promise to teach Guy how to do this himself.) It has to be said that despite this dramatic change, Guy is not a very involving character. There just doesn’t seem to be a lot of him there, which actually makes sense — he lives in a society that actively works against people forming deep character. What could they possibly construct it out of?

That’s the book. Short as it is, it still took me a while to decide just what Bradbury was up to.

At first, I thought Fahrenheit 451 was simply a traditional dystopia; the covers of many editions call it that. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, a dystopia is a “society (or state of society) in which conditions are extremely bad; an extremely negative, pessimistic, or otherwise bleak depiction of the future, especially one that shows societal collapse or widespread dysfunction.”

Certainly Guy Montag’s world is an extremely bleak and dysfunctional one, and Bradbury’s novel shares some elements with classic dystopias like 1984 and Brave New World, not least in having a protagonist whose growing awareness ultimately blossoms into outright rebellion against an oppressive system; in this Guy corresponds to Winston Smith and the Savage in the earlier books.

However, while Orwell and Huxley were political thinkers and their critique is primarily a political one, Ray Bradbury was the opposite of a political thinker (as he himself acknowledged), and his vision is almost aggressively nonpolitical. There is no Big Brother or Mustapha Mond at the helm here, no all-powerful party exerting control. In fact, in Fahrenheit 451 there are no visible political mechanisms for keeping people in line at all, and the book does not make the political diagnosis (whether explicit or implicit) that it needs to make in order to be a true dystopia in the Orwellian sense; instead, Bradbury’s critique is almost wholly cultural.

At one point, Millie and some of her friends talk about the president and the candidate who ran against him in the last election (apparently there are elections), but Bradbury depicts both of these men as nonentities, empty suits, nothing more than two bland consumer commodities, one of whom was just packaged and marketed more effectively than the other. It’s never suggested that they have any real power or influence over anything important.

Indeed, Bradbury makes it clear that this warped social order was not imposed from above; rather it surged up from below. Awful as this regime is, it is responsive to the will of the people; books are burned because that’s what the people want. They want books destroyed because the disquieting things in their pages upset them and make them feel inferior and unhappy, and so they have demanded that there be no more books. It’s as simple as that.

1966 Truffaut Movie Poster

As is usually the way with this kind of cautionary vision, this novel of the future is anchored in its moment. Bradbury constructed his future out of the worse aspects of his present, and Fahrenheit 451 is a catalogue of the anxieties of the immediate postwar world magnified and projected unchecked into a nightmare tomorrow (though that’s not all it is).

They’re all here — the fears of juvenile delinquency (joy-riding teenagers try to run Guy down in the street, and Clarisse may have been killed by them), of conformist pressures (Guy’s fellow firemen and Millie’s friends look askance at any deviation from the norm in speech or action, and vigilant neighbors are always ready to rat out a suspected book-hoarder), of the withering of community and the alienation and anonymity of a mass society (charmingly symbolized by Bradbury as the disappearance of front porches, places where people once could sit and talk with neighbors), of loveless marriages and the disintegration of family (Guy and Millie are almost completely alienated from each other, and children, if they’re had at all, have become encumbrances to be pushed off onto “professionals” for as many hours a day as possible), and of warm humanity being replaced by cold technology (one of the firemen’s most effective tools in tracking down book lovers is a merciless, unrelenting Mechanical Hound).

And of course, there are the Big Three terrors of the 1950’s — the Red Menace and its agents within (transformed into secret book readers and combatted with the same McCarthyite program of domestic spying, blacklisting, and book banning and burning that marred the Eisenhower years), nuclear war (military jets are always zooming ominously overhead, and the story ends with the bombs finally falling, which is not an entirely bad thing — the war shatters this deranged society and permits the exiles to begin the task of rebuilding it) and perhaps greatest of all, the brain-sapping, soul-stealing power of the mass media, which of course in Bradbury’s day meant television. (Eight years after Fahrenheit 451, FCC chairman Newton Minnow would famously call the whole medium “a vast wasteland.” I guess he didn’t love Lucy.) Worry about the inimical influence of the boob tube was a common theme in the 50’s; it was a note Bradbury had already sounded in his 1951 short story, “The Pedestrian.”

At one point, as Montag is fleeing the city, the authorities ask people to be on the lookout for him, and he pictures those obedient, empty, screen-lit faces, the very image of blank conformity, drained of every quirk, of everything individual and human:

He imagined thousands on thousands of faces peering into yards, into alleys, and into the sky, faces hid by curtains, pale, night-frightened faces, like gray animals peering from electric caves, faces with gray, colorless eyes, gray tongues and gray thoughts looking out through the numb flesh of the face.

This is Bradbury’s ultimate fear, that the result of living in an all-enveloping, manipulative media environment will be a permanent case of amnesia, the erasure of everything. The troublesome past consumed in flames, every nonconformist impulse reduced to ash, the flattened present rolling by without a whisper and certainly without a protest (for most of the book it’s clear that a war is coming but no one even seems to notice), and a deadened, passive populace alienated from each other and even from themselves, too obsessed with superficial happiness to realize how miserable they really are.

More Dangerous than the H-Bomb

Early in the book, Guy comes home to find that Millie has attempted suicide… or has she? She doesn’t remember. Maybe she simply forgot how many sleeping pills she took, and then took some more, and then forgot again, and took some more, and then forgot again, and…

This moment, which occurs barely ten pages into the novel, provides a clue to Bradbury’s real purpose; Fahrenheit 451 is neither a political statement (despite its use of the dystopian form), nor a simple catalogue of midcentury anxieties, even though it employs those fears. At bottom, the novel is an impassioned, poetic plea for the necessity of memory in a time of rapid social and technological change.

Of course it’s poetic — it’s Bradbury, the least realistic of great science fiction writers, and applying the standards of realism to him does him a disservice. Taken literally, the central device of firemen who start fires with their kerosene-shooting hoses is absurd; taken poetically, taken as an image, it couldn’t be more perfect, and this is Bradbury’s method throughout the book. Perhaps the most chilling example of this is the Mechanical Hound; Bradbury doesn’t make an argument about man vs. machine, or life vs. death, or human freedom vs. technological slavery. He paints you a picture; he describes the Mechanical Hound, and you just feel how wrong it is, the warm and domestic made into a cold, implacable instrument of punishment and death, and it is as a collection of these sub-rational moments and images and not as a polemic or coherent critique that the book is most effective.

Galaxy February 1951

It’s conventional wisdom (in this case it’s true) to say that Bradbury was generally not at his best in his novels, which tend to be deeply felt rather than tightly constructed or rigorously thought out; there are fine episodes in them, but they tend to remain episodes only, and resist integration into a larger and more unified structure. This is true of Fahrenheit 451, but — perhaps because of its brevity — it is less true of it than it is of a longer, more ambitious work like Something Wicked this Way Comes, which is more damaged by its unevenness. That book has some of Bradbury’s very best writing, but it also has some extended passages where he seems in danger of losing control of his material altogether. (I have my own theory about the reason for this — I think Something Wicked this Way Comes was a book that just meant too much to him.) If Fahrenheit 451 doesn’t reach those highs, it never sinks to those lows either; it remains a more consistent, middle-course book.

Fahrenheit 451 started out as “The Fireman,” a novella published in Galaxy in 1951. Perhaps it should have stayed that way. Bradbury doubled the story’s length in expanding it into a novel, and if there are some good things to be found in the extra pages, and there are, “The Fireman” also lost some of its virtues of concision and greater poetic concentration. Both versions are readily available, so it’s easy to judge for yourself.

I’m glad I reread Fahrenheit 451. If I didn’t find it to be quite the masterpiece that it is often declared to be (frequently by people who’ve never read it), it’s still a deeply affecting book, with a distinctive, twilight, eerily melancholy mood. (It’s the sort of book that seems to echo when you turn the pages.) If words are arrows (flaming ones?), I can’t say that every one Bradbury loosed from his bow hit the bull’s eye, but you can always tell what he was aiming at; you know that he meant every one of them.

A writer like that is always worth reading… especially when he was right. Look around at the world today, unapologetically presentist, recklessly, even aggressively engaged in wholesale forgetting. We probably won’t wind up needing arsonist firemen, but only because we’ll be only too happy to do the figurative (I hope it will stay figurative) burning ourselves.

So, before the smoke gets any thicker, fight back by doing what Clarisse persuaded Guy to do — turn away from the screens and toward other human beings; sit down in the same room with one of them and have a conversation. Go for a walk and look around yourself and touch and taste and smell the world you’ve been given. And reclaim your humanity by remembering, because in the end, it’s only remembering that can save us… and hold tight to one of Ray Bradbury’s greatest insights, that remembering is more powerful when we do it together — remember with someone.

And speaking of remembering, always remember to look both ways before crossing the street, ok? Because some people might not be happy about what you’re up to…

Always Ride on the Ray Side of the Street

Thomas Parker is a native Southern Californian and a lifelong science fiction, fantasy, and mystery fan. When not corrupting the next generation as a fourth grade teacher, he collects Roger Corman movies, Silver Age comic books, Ace doubles, and despairing looks from his wife. His last article for us was A Decisive Argument for Physical Media

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