While reading this book so far, my favorite thing has been how Ray Bradbury portrays what we see as normal. I love how he uses Clarisse and her family as kind of like the window into the real world.
"I'm seventeen and crazy. . . When people ask your age, [my uncle] said, always say seventeen and insane." (p. 5) This was said by Clarisse McClellan, the young girl that the fireman, Guy Montag, meets late one night. She was told to say this because she was what was considered very weird. She is not “social” in school. She knows strange things. When she and Guy first meet, she tells him of how things supposedly “used to be”. She tells him of how firemen used to put out fires instead of creating them. This set Guy off and thought for sure she was crazy. Yet, they still both seemed to have a fascination with each other. Clarisse sparks a curiosity in Guy about his life and morality. The two of them meet a couple more times until suddenly, no more Clarisse. Guy questions where she is when his wife, Mildred, says she was hit and killed by a speeding car. (oh the irony)
To me, Clarisse's dying is like the normal society dying with her. Also, that now, the crazy world they live in will never go back to the way it supposedly once was. The little piece of hope that existed is now gone. Unless... Guy can save it. I feel as though it kind of maybe alludes to something at the end of the section when we find out he’s been hiding a book in his house. Maybe he’ll try to change things?-- I can’t wait to continue reading and find out!