1.
Who is Guy Montag?
a. He
is a librarian.
b. He
is the mayor.
c. He
is a doctor.
d. He
is a fireman.
2.
Describe his job.
a. He
maintains information files for the city.
b. He
teaches school.
c. He
finds books and burns them.
d. He
is a curator in a museum.
3.
Describe Clarisse McClellan
a.
She is shy and slightly handicapped.
b.
She is a young girl who likes to think and talk.
c.
She is extremely rigid and law-abiding.
d.
She is a flirt whose only concern is getting men to like her.
4.
What smelled like perfume to Montag?
a. It
was the printers ink on the books.
b. It
was the cooking fumes from the restaurant.
c. It
was the kerosene.
d. It
was the smoke from the fireplace.
5.
Clarisse asked Montag a question. His reply was, "No." What was the
question?
a.
Was he happy?
b.
Could he read?
c.
Did he ever want to get married?
d.
Had he ever committed a crime?
6.
Who is Mildred?
a.
She is Clarisse's mother.
b.
She is Montag's wife.
c.
She is a doctor at Emergency Hospital.
d.
She is a writer who has gone underground.
7.
What happened to her?
a.
She was captured and sent to a prison camp.
b.
She contracted a fatal, contagious disease and had to be quarantined.
c.
She took an overdose of sleeping pills and had to have her stomach and blood
pumped
clean.
d.
She had just been promoted to a position of power in the government.
8.
Why did Emergency Hospital send technicians instead of a doctor to treat the
patient?
a.
The patient didn't have enough insurance coverage to merit a doctor's care.
b.
Doctors only treated men.
c.
There weren't enough doctors, so none ever left the hospital.
d.
That kind of medical procedure was so common that technician-operated machines
had
been
developed to treat the patient.
9.
What were parlor walls?
a.
They were a kind of surround television with which the audience could interact.
b.
They were portable partitions that could be repositioned to create a variety of
living
spaces.
c.
They were hidden microphones that could monitor conversations.
d.
They were barricades that separated one neighborhood from another.
10.
There was a robotic animal equipped with a steel needle, and programmed to hunt
and kill.
What
kind of animal was it?
a. It
was dragon.
b. It
was a hound.
c. It
was a lion.
d. It
was a rattlesnake.
11.
What did Montag believe had been done to the animal?
a. It
had been programmed to beg for money.
b. It
had been programmed to do tricks.
c. It
had been programmed to attack the elderly.
d. It
had been programmed to act against Montag.
12.
Clarisse was part of the old society where talking and thinking were
appreciated. How was
this
viewed by the others?
a.
She was revered as a holy one.
b.
She was thought to be insane.
c.
She was considered anti-social.
d.
She was tolerated with amusement.
13.
Where did Clarisse get most of her information about the way life used to be?
a.
Her uncle told her.
b.
She watched old videos.
c.
She learned it in history class.
d.
She had secretly read her grandmother's diaries, which she had hidden in her
room.
14.
Who was Captain Beatty?
a. He
was Montag's boss at work.
b. He
was a retired naval officer. He often told old sea stories.
c. He
was the mayor.
d. He
was Clarisse's uncle.
15.
How did the firemen know which houses had books?
a.
The books all had bar codes on the back covers. These could be read for up to
one mile
away
by a special computerized track.
b.
Neighbors, family members, and friends became informants and telephoned the
authorities.
c.
They conducted random searches.
d.
The fire dogs could sniff them out.
16.
What lie did Captain's Beatty tell Montag?
a. He
told Montag that authors had never been appreciated; indeed, they had always
been
regarded
as outcasts.
b. He
told Montag that women were too delicate to be workers.
c. He
told Montag that firemen had never been used to prevent fires, only to start
them.
d. He
told Montag that he (Montag) was next in line for a promotion at work.
17.
What did Montag do in the old lady's attic?
a. He
took a book.
b. He
sat and cried.
c. He
destroyed all of her old family pictures.
d. He
took a nap.
18.
The firemen wanted to provide as much of a show as possible. How did they do
this?
a.
They made watching mandatory for everyone over the age of twelve.
b.
They advertised by having volunteers call people to remind them to come.
c.
They had a famous person start the blaze.
d.
They had the fires at night when they look prettier.
19.
What did the old woman do?
a.
She locked herself in her apartment and refused to watch.
b.
She lit the match and then committed suicide.
c.
She danced and threw more books on the blaze.
d. She
dressed in black, knelt before the fire, and prayed and cried.
20.
What happened to Clarrise?
a.
She was hit by a car.
b.
She was hypnotized and forced to change her thinking.
c.
She was attacked by a pack of mechanical hounds.
d.
She escaped to the wilderness and joined the rebels.
21.
What was Montag afraid would happen when the Captain came to visit?
a. He
was afraid the Captain would eat all of his (Montag's) food rations for the
whole
week.
b. He
was afraid the Captain would see how well he (Montag) was living, and reduce
his
pay.
c. He
was afraid the Captain would find the book he had stolen from the old lady.
d. He
was afraid the Captain would stay for a long visit. Montag was shy, and was
very
nervous
about having guests.
22.
What did Captain Beatty believe?
a. He
believed that all people should be masters of their own destinies.
b. He
believed that books put upsetting thoughts in people's minds and kept them from
being
happy and satisfied.
c. He
believed that firemen should be the highest paid workers because they were
doing
the
most important job in society.
d. He
believed that the world was about to end because of all of the greed and
corruption.
He
also believed that he could save it if enough people would follow him.
23.
What did Montag do after the captain had left the house?
a. He
sat and cried.
b. He
disinfected everything the captain had touched.
c. He
went out for a long walk.
d. He
showed Mildred the books he had been stealing and hiding.
24.
Who was Faber?
a. He
was Montag's brother-in-law, and another sympathizer.
b. He
was second in command after Beatty.
c. He
was a retired English professor.
d. He
was the chief physician at Emergency Hospital.
25.
Why did Montag go to see Faber?
a. He
needed a duplicate copy of the stolen book before he returned the original to
Captain
Beatty.
b.
Faber had been a friend of Montag's wife's family. Montag thought Faber could
give
him
advice about how to help his wife.
c. He
wanted Faber to translate the books that were not in English.
d. He
wanted to get information about others who had books. He thought that giving
the
information
to Beatty might help his career.
26.
Faber felt that three elements were missing from life. Which of these was NOT
one of the
elements?
a.
Quality and texture of information
b.
The satisfaction of choosing one's own job
c.
Leisure time to think
d.
The right to carry out actions based on the other two items
27.
What plan did Montag and Faber devise?
a.
They were going to replace the kerosene with a non-flammable liquid.
b.
They were going to develop a virus to implant in the mechanical hounds. It
would
destroy
their killer instincts.
c.
They were going to plant books in firemen's houses and turn in alarms on the
firemen.
This
was to cast suspicion on all firemen.
d.
They were going to bury as many books as they could find in an old root cellar
on
Faber's
property.
28.
What was Montag willing to do to convince Faber to help carry out the plan?
a. He
would pay Faber the money his wife wanted to use for the fourth parlor wall.
b. He
would quit his job and move in with Faber.
c. He
would destroy his book, page by page, until Faber would cooperate.
d. He
would do the first five operations by himself so that Faber would not be
implicated.
29.
What had Faber designed that allowed him to be in constant contact with Montag?
a. He
had designed a TV monitor that could be placed in a watch mechanism.
b. He
had designed an electronic radio transmitter which could be placed in the ear.
c. He
had installed a thought-wave amplifier in each of their brains.
d. He
had invented a liquid that could be traced by monitoring it's position
emissions.
30.
Why did Faber decide to go to St. Louis?
a. He
wanted to get away from Montag for a while.
b. He
wanted to raise funds for their project.
c. He
needed electronic parts and St. Louis was the only place to buy them.
d. He
wanted to enlist the help of an unemployed printer to begin making copies of
books.
31.
Why did Montag burn the book of poetry in the wall incinerator in his home?
a. He
had been told to do so by Faber, through the transmitter, to show the ladies he
was
playing
a joke on them.
b. He
was desperate enough to do anything to save his relationship with his wife.
c. He
didn't like the poems. He though they weren't worth saving.
d. He
was addicted to the feelings of pain/pleasure that he got from burning books.
32.
Where did Montag hide his books after the ladies left?
a. He
hid them in his attic, above the heat/air conditioning vent.
b. He
hid them behind a false wall he had previously built in his apartment for such
a
time.
c. He
hid them in his backyard.
d. He
hid them in the firehouse.
33.
What was the destination of the alarm on the night Montag returned to work at
the firehouse?
a.
The destination was the town library.
b.
The destination was Montag's home.
c.
The destination was the hospital. A few of the doctors were giving books to the
patients.
d. It
was Faber's home.
34.
Who was the final informant on Montag's home?
a. It
was Faber.
b. It
was Mildred.
c. It
was Beatty.
d. It
was Mrs. Phelps.
35.
Why did Montag kill Captain Beatty?
a.
Montag was insane because he saw his books burning.
b. It
was an accident, Montag's finger slipped on the safety catch on the flame
thrower,
and
Beatty got in the way.
c.
Beatty was aware that Montag was wearing a radio transmitter, and he was
determined
to
find out who was on the other end.
d. He
wanted to stop the firemen from burning more books.
36.
Why didn't Montag run away before he killed Captain Beatty?
a. He
wanted to stay and watch his house and books burn totally into ashes.
b.
Faber told him to stay where he was.
c. He
wanted to make sure Mildred was safe.
d. He
knew that the mechanical hound was in the neighborhood and would kill him.
37.
Where did Montag go after he killed Beatty?
a. He
went to the firehouse.
b. He
went to Faber's house.
c. He
went to Mildred's friend's house.
d. He
went for a long, fast ride in his beetle.
38.
When Montag left Faber's house, which direction did he go?
a. He
headed back into the city.
b. He
headed across the state to the mountains.
c. He
headed for the river.
d. He
headed for the spaceport.
39.
Why did Montag take whiskey, a suitcase, and some of Faber's dirty clothes with
him?
a. He
needed some strong-smelling things to throw the dogs off his scent.
b. He
wanted to disguise himself as a drunken bum so he could pass through the city.
c. He
wanted to leave them at a deserted shack to make his pursuers think he was in
one
location
while he went the opposite direction.
d. He
was headed into the wilderness. He took the whiskey in case he needed it for
pain;
the
dirty clothes to wear, and the suitcase to collect any books he might find
along the
way.
40.
Montag identified something he saw in his travels as a path to safety. What was
it?
a. It
was the North Star.
b. It
was the lights from the airport runway.
c. It
was the railroad tracks.
d. It
was a series of road signs.
41.
What was different about the fire Montag saw after leaving the river?
a. It
was a different color because it was fueled by natural wood instead of
chemicals.
b. It
was giving warmth and comfort, not destroying things.
c. It
was considerably cooler than the fires that the firemen ignited.
d. It
was only giving off low flames. Those started by the firemen usually leaped
hundreds
of feet into the air.
42.
During the manhunt for Montag by the hound, why did the camera identify an
innocent
man
as Montag?
a.
Faber deliberately misled them to get them off of Montag's trail.
b.
The computer that was tracking him malfunctioned and identified the wrong man.
c.
Nobody really knew what he looked like, so they didn't know whom to chase.
d.
The firemen needed to look good, and put a neat ending on the day's work.
43.
What was different about the hobos Montag Met?
a.
They were all disfigured from exposure to the unfiltered country air.
b.
They were all former firemen.
c.
They were all intellectuals.
d.
They were clean and well-fed.
44.
How were these men preserving literature?
a.
They had built a secret fireproof library underground and quietly collected
books.
b.
Each carried a backpack full of books. It was his duty to safeguard them.
c.
They were burying books in holes along the railroad tracks. They had developed
a
secret
marking system so they knew where the books were.
d.
Each man had memorized a piece of literature to be written down at a later
time.
45.
What literature did Montag preserve?
a. It
was War and Peace.
b. It
was the Book of Ecclesiastes.
c. It
was the Constitution of the United States.
d. It
was all of Shakespeare's plays.
46.
What happened during the war?
a.
The city was damaged, but not seriously.
b.
They were victorious and destroyed the other cities.
c.
The city and its inhabitants were destroyed.
d.
Both sides called a truce, and together pursued the destruction of all books.
47.
What did Montag and the intellectuals believe their mission to be once the war
was ended?
a.
They wanted to learn from previous mistakes and always to remember.
b.
They wanted to convert any survivors to their way of thinking.
c.
They wanted to teach everyone how to read.
d.
They wanted to pursue and kill any remaining firemen so they couldn't start
burning
books
again.
48. What was the inciting incident of the story? Why? What conflict does it create & how does it kick off the rising action?
49. What was the climax of the plot?
50. How did the denouement (resolution) establish the idea that Fahrenheit 451 is a book about self-determination and hope, and not just book-burning or censorship?
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