Description
First edition of Fahrenheit 451,
the seminal work in the field of science fiction.
A bright copy kept in its original cloth
and in its dusk-jacket, as issued.
Bradbury, Ray. Fahrenheit 451.
New York, Ballantine Books, [1953].
In-8 de (3) ff., 199 pp., (3) pp.
Toile rouge de l’éditeur, jaquette conservée.
197 x 133 mm.
First edition of one of the seminal works in the field of science fiction.
Edition originale de la grande utopie de Ray Bradbury.
Bruccoli and Clark, I, p.42 ; Anatomy of Wonder, II-153 ; Pringle, Science Fiction : The 100 Best Novels 8. Survey of Science Fiction Literature II, pp. 749-55.
Fahrenheit 451 remains Bradbury’s most acclaimed work.
« Frightening in its implications Mr. Bradbury’s account of this insane world, which bears many alarming resemblances to our own, is fascinating » (New York Times).
« Bradbury’s novels include Fahrenheit 451, presenting a future totalitarian state in which supertelevision presents all that people are to think and know, and the ownership of books is cause for the state to burn both volumes and owners” (The Concise Oxford Companion to American Literature).
« In a totalitarian state, books are burned and private thought or action is criminal » (Gerber, Utopian Fantasy, p. 159)
« While the jet bombers boom overhead and another nuclear war threatens, Americans live a mindless life in a society where everyone is encouraged to lose himself in such distractions as four-wall television, hearing-aid radios, high-speed travel, and group sports. Life is reduced to the paste-pudding norm of a mass audience, for it serves the purpose of the government to keep people from thinking. The gadget are, of course, marvelous and everywhere, while the greatest enemies of the status quo are books, which, when they are occasionally discovered, are burned by firemen who are, in this fireproof age, no longer needed to put out fires, but to set them » (Hillegas, The Future as Nightmare, p. 158).
« Ecrivain américain (août 1920-janvier 1999) Ray Bradbury est un contre-utopiste servi par un style scintillant que ne rendent pas toujours les traductions qui en ont été faites en français. Ceci se remarque surtout dans Fahrenheit 451 : dans cet avenir non précisé, on est pompier non pas pour éteindre le feu mais pour l’allumer, le carburant idéal étant constitué de livres. Un de ces pompiers, plus intelligent que Savonarole, comprend soudain ce qu’il fait et va rejoindre à l’extérieur de la cité quelques proscrits dont la mémoire est dépositaire de la littérature anglo-saxonne, plus quelques livres étrangers » (Pierre Versins, Encyclopédie de l’utopie et de la science-fiction, 128).
Bel exemplaire conservé dans sa reliure d’éditeur, avec la jaquette illustrée, tel que paru.
A bright copy kept in its original cloth and in its dusk-jacket, as issued.
SOLD