Fahrenheit 451, takes the reader on this journey as main character Guy Montag realizes this and tries to get many of the people around him to change along with him, such as his wife, Mildred. Along the way he meets some influential characters such as Clarisse, Faber, and Granger. Bradbury shows how Montag develops as a character using his influences, personal experiences, and events in his life changing him a person.
Montag is very proud of himself and the job he has, he believes what he is doing is right and actually helping society, until his neighbor sparks a change in him and …show more content…
This begins to initialize his change because he actually argues back with Clarisse, instead of how he was at the beginning of their conversation and just listening and agreeing with everything she says he actually engages in conversation with her. Prompting his change and intrigues his curiosity allowing him to start to want to think.
Montag begins to how he is changing throughout part II. Montag shows his first example of change when he asks Faber, a retired english professor, to “teach me to understand what I read” (78). This is showing his change because it is showing him wanting to start be able to retain knowledge instead of how he is in part I and not caring about remembering anything. As
Montag continues his change he begins to realize how bestial the people in his society are, similar to his old self he even refers to two of Mildred’s friends Mrs. Bowles and Mrs. Phelps as monsters he asks Faber did he “ hear them, did you hear these monsters talking about monsters”
(94). Montag expresses to Faber and the reader how he feels about Mildred’s friends by referring to them a monsters. Toward the end of part III Montag finally begins to acknowledge that he