Ray Bradbury 1953 Fahrenheit 451 Hurt Audiobook 1
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- Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024
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17 U.S. Code § 107: Limits exclusive rights through fair use, which allows the use of copyrighted works without permission for certain purposes.
I JUST FOUND A SUPER EASY WAY TO FIND WHERE YOU ARE IN THE AUDIO for your text:
STEP 1: Click on "Transcript"-- this should pop up on the right side of the video. Click on Transcript that comes up so your curser is on the Transcript.
STEP 2: Press "CTRL F" to bring up the "Find Box" and type the text you are looking for, BOOM, the time stamp is there.
For example, if you were looking for page 94 in the audio and the first line in the text on page 94 is "But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand" (Bradbury 94), I would type "Montag was gone and back" in the "Find Box" and the time stamp comes up right away so you can find it in the audio! WOOHOOOO!
Hope this helps! Thank you.
I cant find transcript
@_Encrypt3d Are you on a computer like a desktop? I think that might be the issue. Let me know if not and I'll try to see what I can do on my side.
@@BAManrique nvm
Finished this in 1 shift of work. Thanks for this. Narrator's voice is awesome
@@M.A.R.S. 👊! GREAT! What do you think of this text? What stood out to you the most and why? Thank you.
So useful I don’t wanna read the book so I can listen to it while doing something else for school
@antoinedabesthello8725 Ok. I completely understand. Just make sure you observe the text or text in general every once in a while because this encourages the breakdown of society mentioned in Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451: The three things missing from society are, quality/texture (substantial learning material), leisure (time to understand substantial material), and the right to carry out actions based on the interaction of the first two (applications of what you read and understand) (Bradbury). A simple example can be seen in how many persons do not know what should be capitalized when writing or know or understand how to even use a period at the end of each sentence. This may seem minute but leads to more breakdowns as every issue begins with a tiny particle.
Friend, if you read this, Thank you. I hope you know I'm rooting for you 🎉.
@@BAManrique ❤
I listen to audiobooks all the time I enjoy them at least as much as reading a book. Unfortunately when I listen to a book instead of reading it I don't seem to remember the material as well as I do when reading a book. I hope that it won't be the same for you! 🤞
What grade do you do it in school
@yoyobillet5046 I teach this to Freshman/9th Graders in High School and would honestly not recommend reading this text during another grade as Freshman Year of High School works perfectly to hopefully set a literary foundation about the importance of reading on one's own.
Part 1 start: 0:50
Part 2 start: 1:55:10
Part 3 start: 3:09:05
Thank you so much
@@RagingRiver1000 no problem someone had to be the link guy
Good job. I'll also leave this information here, just in case: I FOUND A SUPER EASY WAY TO FIND WHERE YOU ARE IN THE AUDIO for your text:
STEP 1: Click on "Transcript"-- this should pop up on the right side of the video. Click on Transcript that comes up so your curser is on the Transcript.
STEP 2: Press "CTRL F" to bring up the "Find Box" and type the text you are looking for, BOOM, the time stamp is there.
For example, if you were looking for page 94 in the audio and the first line in the text on page 94 is "But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand" (Bradbury 94), I would type "Montag was gone and back" in the "Find Box" and the time stamp comes up right away so you can find it in the audio! WOOHOOOO!
Hope this helps! Thank you.
@emefaaclinou7954 Yes, but just in case: I FOUND A SUPER EASY WAY TO FIND WHERE YOU ARE IN THE AUDIO for your text:
STEP 1: Click on "Transcript"-- this should pop up on the right side of the video. Click on Transcript that comes up so your curser is on the Transcript.
STEP 2: Press "CTRL F" to bring up the "Find Box" and type the text you are looking for, BOOM, the time stamp is there.
For example, if you were looking for page 94 in the audio and the first line in the text on page 94 is "But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand" (Bradbury 94), I would type "Montag was gone and back" in the "Find Box" and the time stamp comes up right away so you can find it in the audio! WOOHOOOO!
Hope this helps! Thank you.
Hey there! Im about to write an essay on this book for my college compisition class, and i just wanted to thank you for posting this audiobook, as i dont have access to a physical copy and i hate reading online (my teacher gave us the book in form of 3 PDFs; one for each part), so this is the second best option to a physical copy. After getting through the book, its all i expected, with a bit more poetic sense than i thought!! As i sat pondering, i also realized one of my favorite songs, Killing Birds by Chris Cornell, makes a great parallel to Part 1! The thought stemmed in my mind from the specific scene of the books falling from the attic being compared to birds... the strongest scene in this entire book to me.
@BrolyOrAurak I see. I absolutely STRONGLY dislike reading online. I so much strongly dislike it that I can't even listen to the audio, I HAVE TO see the actual words on paper with my own eyes. Now I have to go listen to that song! I'll check back with you in a bit. Thank you.
@BAManrique oh I get that totally, and I would if I could, as it'd take me about half as long for me, I tend to read 200pgs an hour, but my local library didn't have any copies available. Hope you like the song! I consider Chris Cornell to be only an inch away from a poet, and if you like that song I strongly recommend branching out further, especially into his songs "Cleaning my gun", "misery chain", and "wrong side"
Ok, just listened here with lyrics: ruclips.net/video/3rEoqFFiX4Y/видео.html.
Pretty good. I couldn't stop thinking about Captain Beatty and what his life possibly looked like as a child. I don't want to spoil the text for you, but I WILL tell you the evidence that books were BEYOND involved in his upbringing is overwhelming every time we read of him or about him. Thank you.
So useful, thank you 🙏🏽
@@maple8021 Any memorable quotes or parts? Thank you.
i had to read up to page 50 for English class and i used this to help me because i don't like reading lol thank you
Hey there friend! I am glad you found this resource useful. I also did not like reading but look what happened to me! I became a Successful Instructor and Life Long Learner! Just make sure that YOUR EYES have some exposure to written text so you know when to capitalize letters and use a period, specifically so this text doesn't come back to bite you in your education because Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 literally informs the reader of the breakdown of society because people do not use their eyes to read.
Thank you so much
@thecomentingcat6280 Of course! What do you think so far or if you're done, what did you think? Thank you.
Thank you for the upload, ive been working my way through the classics and i really appreciate people uploading them to youtube. I hope you upload more!
It would be even cooler if you read them yourself 😊
@andygeary3531 Of course. I also have To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. What else are you looking for or reading? Thank you.
@BAManrique I'm not sure to be honest. I usually just ask people for recommendations and then go from there. So if you were to recommend 10 classics what would they be?
Do you have any recommendations?
@@andygeary3531 My Top 10 Favorite Classics in order, beginning at number one:
1. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
2. The Odyssey by Homer
3. Othello by William Shakespeare
4. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
5. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
6. Lord of the Flies by William Golding
7. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
8. Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
9. The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer
10. The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
Thank you.
@@andygeary3531
My Top 10 Favorite Classics in order, beginning at number one:
1. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
2. The Odyssey by Homer
3. Othello by William Shakespeare
4. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
5. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
6. Lord of the Flies by William Golding
7. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
8. Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
9. The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer
10. The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
Thank you.
Thanks 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
So relevant today. Everybody is itching to buy that fourth wall. Politics? One column 2 sentences.
@@tpproject8845 Great observation, so many Mildreds! I get lucky every once in a while and have a Clarisse McClellan or 10-17 in a class of 36.
@@BAManrique College or younger, i imagine the mindset of plugging into short form entertainment instead of longer pursuits that don't have the instant gratification more prevalent with the younger people. I'm only 25 myself with no college but it is frightening the slow creep of it into my age group. More troubling is that is seems to have really grasped a lot of older people as well, even folks in their 60's and higher a regular tik tok users these days. In the last four days i've listened to Animal Farm, Fahrenheit 451, 1984. Scary times indeed.
That's so weird. In the version I'm reading, it says, "We've started and won two atomic wars since 2022!" Lmao
Instead of saying "We've started and won two atomic wars since 2022!" The audio says "1990" (Bradbury 69). I believe the original text Bradbury had written said 1990 as he wrote Fahrenheit 451 in 1953. This should REALLY tell us something now.
My copy of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 is this version: ISBN: 978-1-4516-7331-9: www.amazon.com/Fahrenheit-451-Ray-Bradbury/dp/1451673310/?tag=offa01-20
Thank you.
Same here lol
14:22 p9
45:58 bottom of p26
52:00 p30 2nd paragraph
1:02:49 p36
Great. What are your thoughts so far? Thank you.
@@BAManrique i'm just reading it for english class
@HMSandNMHSPreformingArts . . . Hey that's great. Any thoughts on what you're reading or understanding? Thank you.
I have just finished Othello by your recommendation and i enjoyed it a lot despite finding the old english writing style to be rather challenging.
I do have one question about it though. Why did Iago create such a plot? Surely it wasnt just because he didnt get the lieutenants position right? Was he mad or evil? Did i miss something else that explained his actions?
@@andygeary3531
Allegedly, he's a sociopath or psychopath. Anyways, now that you're well versed in the story, enjoy this bit: ruclips.net/video/sxp0Z5W0Vxw/видео.htmlsi=2CE592Gbf_vZrekc
Cheers!
pg 58 1:40:34
1:55:06 pg 65
3:09:05 pg 106
Great. What do you think so far? Thank you.
@@BAManrique is ok. im forced to read it for english class 😒
@lyne8067 Yah. I know. I was also forced to read it too so we might as well do our best to enjoy it while we're reading it. Anything that stands out to you?
Can you put the timestamps for each chapter
@@Josh-mx6rq I definitely planned to do that. I will do my best! Thank you.
I FOUND A SUPER EASY WAY TO FIND WHERE YOU ARE IN THE AUDIO for your text:
STEP 1: Click on "Transcript"-- this should pop up on the right side of the video. Click on Transcript that comes up so your curser is on the Transcript.
STEP 2: Press "CTRL F" to bring up the "Find Box" and type the text you are looking for, BOOM, the time stamp is there.
For example, if you were looking for page 94 in the audio and the first line in the text on page 94 is "But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand" (Bradbury 94), I would type "Montag was gone and back" in the "Find Box" and the time stamp comes up right away so you can find it in the audio! WOOHOOOO!
Hope this helps! Thank you.
Can u label each page or break it into parts so we can find our parts better please
I haven't started yet, but before i do, is this the full audiobook? Do you plan on recording the rest if not?
Yes. This is the FULL audiobook. The only difference is that this audio states: "We’ve started and won two atomic wars
since 1990!" (Bradbury 69) but the text reads "We’ve started and won two atomic wars
since 2022!" (Bradbury 69). I am reading this version by the way: www.amazon.com/Fahrenheit-451-Ray-Bradbury/dp/1451673310/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2BTMV44H6J5VW&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.RR2ndwnaIGwOaZGlMX6eKM_eAXFNE0swfMZtubNbdQ685B4epfIBVh_Oe21n9yJ2VjK7D2GJJMoJwXDqsgiAYCO1tCZbCswn0YoQBZWgVvyT0DjdMbfu9AzTimRdlabwAWHjQpEAJFB5J5z-MgCWNi9UYs-usqCFzal37odlMJo.t_glj-a-vwQNJw1t86Mwsro_VCLHU0y5Wna0vwyMkd8&dib_tag=se&keywords=9781451673319&qid=1731115092&sprefix=978145167331%2Caps%2C214&sr=8-1&tag=offa01-20
Thank you.
@BAManrique Thank you so much for taking the time to explain this
@vos7619 Of course! Anytime!
I remember that
2:06:49 🙏
@Thruno Wow! You're almost halfway done. What do you think so far? Thank you.
Hello! This is my other account, I like it! It keeps me on my toes, and it was assigned in school. Normally, I don't really read the books they assign us 😓 but this one is an exception 🫡
Do you know where pg 39 would be?
I JUST FOUND A SUPER EASY WAY TO FIND WHERE YOU ARE IN THE AUDIO for your text:
STEP 1: Click on "Transcript"-- this should pop up on the right side of the video. Click on Transcript that comes up so your curser is on the Transcript.
STEP 2: Press "CTRL F" to bring up the "Find Box" and type the text you are looking for, BOOM, the time stamp is there.
For example, if you were looking for page 94 in the audio and the first line in the text on page 94 is "But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand" (Bradbury 94), I would type "Montag was gone and back" in the "Find Box" and the time stamp comes up right away so you can find it in the audio! WOOHOOOO!
Hope this helps! Thank you.
58:56 my mark
@@Craoxy Great. What do you think so far? Thank you.
1:54:00 part two
Great! What do you think so far?
@@BAManriqueStarted crying at work while listening to that last part 🥲 Specially with what's going on politically in usa
@artemis8676 Glad you're reading! Hang in there.
Is this an unabridged version?
YES! There is only a date change. Instead of saying "We've started and won two atomic wars since 2022!" The audio says "1990" (Bradbury 69). I believe the original text Bradbury had written said 1990 as he wrote Fahrenheit 451 in 1953.
My copy of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 is this version: ISBN: 978-1-4516-7331-9: www.amazon.com/Fahrenheit-451-Ray-Bradbury/dp/1451673310/?tag=offa01-20
Thank you.
3:09:06 chapter 3
@blakestinnett6656 Wow! You are close to completing Fahrenheit 451! 🙌 Hooray 🎉! What do you think so far? Thank you.
Where would pg 94 be? 😭
Save your tears for true heartbreak: Page 94 is on 2:43:55 and no it's not marked on mine, I just struggled to find it. Hustle through now and go get 'em 👊!
OH MY GOSH. THANKS TO YOUR QUESTION, I JUST FOUND A SUPER EASY WAY TO FIND WHERE YOU ARE IN THE TEXT: STEP 1: Click on "Transcript"-- this should pop up on the right side of the video. Click on Transcript that comes up so your curser is on the Transcript.
STEP 2: Press "CTRL F" to bring up the "Find Box" and type the text you are looking for, BOOM, it's there.
For example, you were looking for page 94 in the audio and the first line in the text is "But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand" (Bradbury 94), so I typed "Montag was gone and back" in the "Find Box" and the time stamp came up right away! WOOHOOOO! This also shows that a struggle pays off. THANK YOU! SOO GLAD YOU ASKED!
@BAManrique WOW THATS GREAT, GLAD IS ASKED 😅. THANK YOU SO MUCH, IT REALLY HELPSSS AHH
@@heystobit-jin8021 (AHHHHH). lol! Hang in there!
Page 34?
@Laim245 I JUST FOUND A SUPER EASY WAY TO FIND WHERE YOU ARE IN THE AUDIO for your text:
STEP 1: Click on "Transcript"-- this should pop up on the right side of the video. Click on Transcript that comes up so your curser is on the Transcript.
STEP 2: Press "CTRL F" to bring up the "Find Box" and type the text you are looking for, BOOM, the time stamp is there.
For example, if you were looking for page 94 in the audio and the first line in the text on page 94 is "But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand" (Bradbury 94), I would type "Montag was gone and back" in the "Find Box" and the time stamp comes up right away so you can find it in the audio! WOOHOOOO!
Hope this helps! Thank you.
2:25:00
pg.85
@@Vyzinn Nice! What do you think of the book so far? Thank you.
@@BAManrique Yeah it's pretty interesting so far. Really weird how the story is written though.
@Vyzinn I agree. What do you mean by weird? Perhaps it is because Bradbury wrote the first draft of Fahrenheit 451 on rentable typewriters in the UCLA Library. He spent 9 days and $9.80 (49 hours at 10 cents per hour) completing what was then known as “The Fireman.”
Bookmark for myself 2:58:55
@@BenBlox1710 Great. What are your thoughts so far? Thank you.
The book is starting to get interesting. It’s showing the character development and showing more of the corrupt world. So far it is pretty good!
@BenBlox1710 🙌 YES! So glad you are noting that! Thank you!
1:07:23
@JaneSmith-y6x Great. What do you think so far? Thank you.
Im kinda confused. I don’t understand that well why Montag turned savage and why the books where so bad.
@walterrosich4349 Ok, so Guy Montag is this fireman in Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 who has been burning books for about 10 years since it is illegal to have or read books. After he meets Clarisse McClellan and speaks with her for a while, especially the conversation where she asks him if he's happy, Montag begins to really wonder about his life-- almost feeling threatened because he actually isn't happy at all. There is an overwhelming sense of wonder and absence in Montag's life. An emptiness Montag can no doubt feel. All his wife, Mildred, does is attend to her "Seashells" or earbuds and talk to the parlor walls (TV Walls) that she calls her "family." There is no substance in Montag's life and nothing for him to look forward to. He's so irritated and upset Montag verbally roasts Mildred's Girlfriend, Mrs. Bowles, during Ladies/Girl's Night (Bradbury 97-98). The ignorance of EVERYTHING finally gets to him and he attacks because he is experiencing an internal attack. Even with good intentions, the best hearts crack.
Hope this clarifies some points for you and helps you out.
Thank you.
3:09:09 pt 3
@@Cupids.Arrow_ Great. You're almost done! What do you think so far?
Si
@@sofiatoroburbano963 Yeah! What's your favorite part?
33:37
@@RevBetter Pretty deep. What do you think of the text so far?
@@BAManrique It's interesting to me. We're reading it inside of out English 10 Class and our Teacher linked your video as a Audio we can use. Saving my spot for the next class Lol.
@RevBetter I see. Any favorite quotes you've gone over?
11:32
@dynaa4168 Great. What do you think so far? Thank you!
57:00 pg.48
@@janelleramirez5022 What's something that stands out to you so far? Thank you.
19:58
@@hannahhigginbotham3075 Alright. What are your thoughts so far on this text? Thank you.
52:34 top p33
leaving this here for me later lol 1:30:29
page 27-
@skyer3450 Nice. What do you think so far?
Also, FOUND A SUPER EASY WAY TO FIND WHERE YOU ARE IN THE AUDIO for your text:
STEP 1: Click on "Transcript"-- this should pop up on the right side of the video. Click on Transcript that comes up so your curser is on the Transcript.
STEP 2: Press "CTRL F" to bring up the "Find Box" and type the text you are looking for, BOOM, the time stamp is there.
For example, if you were looking for page 94 in the audio and the first line in the text on page 94 is "But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand" (Bradbury 94), I would type "Montag was gone and back" in the "Find Box" and the time stamp comes up right away so you can find it in the audio! WOOHOOOO!
Hope this helps! Thank you.
@@BAManrique Thank you so much, the transcript really helped! Also I really like the book so far, Montag is an interesting character I find I really enjoy! I'm reading it for school though, so that's the main reason. Thanks for asking! Have a nice day.
@skyer3450 Bravo my dear 👏! Keep it up. 💯!
1:06
@@tommyjarnig3078 Wonderful. What do you think of the book so far? Thank you.
I wish trump voters would read books 😢
@@soluteemoji Everyone needs to read books the way water is thirsted for.
I’m about 100% sure trump voters read books 😅, in the end both candidates were bad choices so let’s not judge people for whatever they chose ❤
On the flip side. onlyfans “models” and welfare recipients aren’t quite the reading type either.
Omg Yes! Not like there’s idiots running around unironically using filler words like “unalived” instead of killed, murdered or dead to soften the actual weight of a situation thanks to leftist censorship 😉 I’d suggest you read (listen in your case, to) 1984 and see which side of the political spectrum the tyrannical regime in power in that novel more closely resembles. Remember just cause something labeled as liberal or democratic doesn’t mean it can’t also be dictatorial/tyrannical.
This has been a PSA from a Canadian who is currently living in a country ran by crooked liberals (who I voted for my first time ever participating at 18)
Shut up
Ts ass 😭🙏
@@Thug-k3x I highly recommend doing your best to communicate in complete sentences to obtain the best of written conversation. A sentence begins with a capital letter and ends with a period. Thank you.
36:55
@@lakemark-e9h Great! What are your thoughts so far? Thank you.
It’s good! I just commented to know where I left off when I come back :)
@lakemark-e9h I know it's good. I was wondering what you thought or if anything stood out to you yet because Fahrenheit 451 gets a little crazy 😀😃.
Also:
I JUST FOUND A SUPER EASY WAY TO FIND WHERE YOU ARE IN THE AUDIO for your text:
STEP 1: Click on "Transcript"-- this should pop up on the right side of the video. Click on Transcript that comes up so your curser is on the Transcript.
STEP 2: Press "CTRL F" to bring up the "Find Box" and type the text you are looking for, BOOM, the time stamp is there.
For example, if you were looking for page 94 in the audio and the first line in the text on page 94 is "But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand" (Bradbury 94), I would type "Montag was gone and back" in the "Find Box" and the time stamp comes up right away so you can find it in the audio! WOOHOOOO!
Hope this helps! Thank you.
1:03:24
@@its_shelby_ig Great. What are your thoughts so far? Thank you.
Im kinda confused. I don’t understand that well why Montag turned savage and why the books where so bad.
@walterrosich4349 Ok, so Guy Montag is this fireman in Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 who has been burning books for about 10 years since it is illegal to have or read books. After he meets Clarisse McClellan and speaks with her for a while, especially the conversation where she asks him if he's happy, Montag begins to really wonder about his life-- almost feeling threatened because he actually isn't happy at all. There is an overwhelming sense of wonder and absence in Montag's life. An emptiness Montag can no doubt feel. All his wife, Mildred, does is attend to her "Seashells" or earbuds and talk to the parlor walls (TV Walls) that she calls her "family." There is no substance in Montag's life and nothing for him to look forward to. He's so irritated and upset Montag verbally roasts Mildred's Girlfriend, Mrs. Bowles, during Ladies/Girl's Night (Bradbury 97-98). The ignorance of EVERYTHING finally gets to him and he attacks because he is experiencing an internal attack. Even with good intentions, the best hearts crack.
Hope this clarifies some points for you and helps you out.
Thank you.
2:42:22
@@howdoiputmyname7495 Great. What do you think so far? Thank you.
The book is pretty good, it was for a English assignment but now I'm getting hooked and excited for what happens next.
@howdoiputmyname7495 Well that's great to read because I wasn't very interested in the book until I met Clarisse McClellan in the pages and I was like hey, I also love walks, talking, and nature so I thought the text was going somewhere and then Fahrenheit 451 finally started to get good.
1:59:44
@@ratatouillesdogs Ok. What do you think so far at this point? Thank you.
2:32:23
@@ratatouillesdogs Great. What do you think so far? Thank you.
1:30:00
@@aikot.8816 Sweet! What do you think so far?
3:01:13
@Artistic_Cyborg Oh wow! You're almost done! What do you think so far? Thank you.
@@BAManrique i like it its interesting !!
@Artistic_Cyborg Wonderful! Anything that stands out to you? Thank you.
=4:44:00
@@BAManrique I like the imagery used and I think its interesting how the people were very numb and lacking empathy towards each other especially in the scene where the women are talking about their husbands at war and not really taking it seriously.
47:39
@@fatemakh96 Sweet! What do you think so far? Thank you.
1:55:10
@@ih2738 Great! What do you think so far?