For those of you who wouldn't know, the Guardian Reading Group began with Ray Bradbury's dystopian classic, Fahrenheit 451, by readers' choice.
That's a great, revolutionary choice (so they said), that will especially appeal to us geek people in love with classical sci-fi, and to us parents looking for books to discuss with our children. Utopian and dystopian fiction is a fascinating subject, or so I think. I often study it with my sixteen and seventeen years old students.
If you never read it, "the novel presents a future American society where reading is outlawed and firemen start fires to burn books." (Wikipedia)
You may, of course, read or reread the book, and discuss it part by part on the Guardian website, or follow the Guardian's Reading group on Twitter. You may also read some companion posts on Guardian Books. They promised one on the novel's historical context, Cold War and McCarthyism. They also provide a list of "further readings" to offer some background to Bradbury's life and books.
Among these suggestions were two really delightful pieces for any geek.
One is a letter by Ray Bradbury himself, written in 1974 and transcripted on the lovely Letters of note website. Asked about "the danger of robots taking over our human world", Bradbury writes a truly wonderful answer:
The second is a video tribute, written for the author's 90th birthday by comedian Rachel Bloom. Be careful, it's definitely not suitable for children under 18, as YouTube confirms! But the – video is hilarious, and comforting in a strange way, thinking that old sci-fi writers can be strongly desirable in our time and place.
"Does the idea of book burning still resonate?" wonder The Guardian and its readers. It certainly does, as Banned Books Week will confirm in a few days.