Use Of Suspense In Fahrenheit 451

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Suspense is a state or feeling of excited or anxious uncertainty about what may happen. Authors like Bradbury use this to easily draw in the reader to the story, and keep the reader’s attention. elaborate Bradbury most commonly uses this in his book Fahrenheit 451. Bradbury uses suspense in almost horrific ways such as deaths, and the common overdoses that were mentioned. The first suspenseful event that really changed Guy, and drew in the reader was finding his wife after she accidentally overdosed on pills. Before he found her, he was walking and talking with Clarisse. When he came home to his dark room, he saw his wife with a face like a “snow covered island.” this really was suspenseful because you did not even know if she was alive until the two men with the machine pumped her stomach. Guy was distressed about the whole situation, as one would naturally be but the worst part was when his wife later woke up and dismissed what happened. I thought that this part was very morbid because overdosing was so common that they didn’t even need a trained doctor, instead they had to emotionless men with a machine. The second most suspenseful event was when Guy …show more content…

After slight confrontation earlier in the story, Guy receives a call at the fire station. When he arrives he notices that the call is for his address, and Mildred is getting into a cab. This really makes the reader very empathetic towards guy because he is really at the lowest of the low right now. When the situation couldn’t get worse, Beatty tries to arrest guy. GUy escapes, and the Mechanical dog pounces on guy, and injects him with a type of venom that was somewhat foreshadowed in the beginning. This is very suspenseful because it sparks the reader's attention in Bradbury's common morbid theme. The character is at his lowest, and is repeatedly knocked down but everyone is still questioning what will happen to the fireman Guy

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