Characters | ||
#1 | Who is the main character in this novel? | Guy Montag |
#2 | This character got Montag to re-evaluate the way he lived his life. | Clarisse |
#3 | Who is the character who loves to talk with 'the family'? | Mildred |
#4 | Who is the captain of the firestation? | Beatty |
#5 | Who is the retired English professor who helps Montag escape? | Faber |
Who Said It? | ||
#1 | 'Are you happy?' | Clarisse |
#2 | 'We need to be really bothered every once in a while.' | Montag |
#3 | 'She's nothing to me; she shouldn't have been reading books... I hate her:' | Mildred |
#4 | 'The salamander devours its own tail.' | Faber |
#5 | 'Why don't you belch Shakespeare at me, you fumbling snob.' | Beatty |
Technology | ||
#1 | This piece of technology finds, paralyzes, and sometimes kills those who go against society | Mechanical Hound |
#2 | This lines the walls of most people's homes | Television |
#3 | This device allows users to block out the noise of the world and listen to other sounds | Seashell Radio |
#4 | This device can see into the stomach and also the soul of those it enters | The Snake |
#5 | This destroys the city instantly | Atom Bomb |
Miscellaneous | ||
#1 | This term can be applied to a person who works against the rules of society; Clarisse defines herself by this term. | Anti-social |
#2 | This technology symbolizes life control. | TV Parlors |
#3 | Who is the leader of the group whose job it is to remember the contents of books | Granger |
#4 | What is the climax of the novel? | The firemen arrive at Montag's house |
#5 | What does the number 451 refer to in the novel? | The temperature at which the pages of books burn |
Vocabulary | ||
#1 | This term means 'to return like for like' | retaliate |
#2 | This term means 'faint noise' | subaudible |
#3 | This term means 'destructive' | ruinous |
#4 | This term means 'opressive power' | tyranny |
#5 | This term means 'emitting light in the dark' | phosphorescent |
Final Question | |
Why does Granger feel they should build a mirror factory? | Mirrors are literally and symbolically used for reflection. |