Topic Sentence #1-
By Bradbury ending the novel with the destruction of the city and the society that has been known, infers that there are changes for the future and the society will grow, rebuilding itself and learning from past mistakes.
After the bomb goes off, Granger looks into the fire and it reminds him of a Phoenix, a bird that would build a pyre that would consequense in him burning himself up. Granger described it by saying “every time he sprang out of the ashes, he got himself born all over again. And it looks like we’re doing the same thing, over and over, but we’ve go one damn thing the Phoenix never 8had.”(Bradbury, 156) He is comparing the Phoenix to the society, saying that the society kept “burning itself up” and getting reborn in a continuous cycle where nothing was changing. He went on to say that there was a difference …show more content…
With the destruction of the society, he is now able to reshape it with the former professors and intellectuals that he found that have are interested in literature and have a plan in spreading the knowledge gained from books. (talk about the books that they will memorize[SIGNIFIGANCE OF THAT], how they will find others, and the esiurens or something that Montag memorized)(maybe talk about how Montag found himself or something since he was feeling remorse for his wife, Clarisse, etc. and possibilities of meeting up with