![]() I don’t know how widely this title is read today. So I was left sort of spooked by the idea of a society that valued technology over books. As an avid reader, who at that point in her life had not considered becoming a librarian, I could not imagine a life without books. And though it’s been a long time since I picked up the book, and don’t think I’ve read it since, I’ve always remembered the eerie and lonely feeling I had while reading the novel and the same feeling that stayed with me when I was done. At the time, I had been on a short-lived ‘read the classics’ kick and read it for my own pleasure, not a school assignment. I first read Fahrenheit 451 somewhere between the end of 8th grade and the beginning of 9th grade. Publisher’s Age Recommendation- General Adult Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451: The Authorized Adaptation Hill & Wang takes a favorite and a classic and cleverly adapts it to a comic form, bringing this story to a whole new generation. ![]()
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