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Characters of Fahrenheit 451

Teacher: Mr Sindlinger's Idiosyncratic Puzzles
Horizontales
This is the first name of a sixteen-year old girl who thinks her fellow students are shallow, who loves natural things like raindrops and tree leaves, and who often rides the future subway to observe grown-up people instead of attending school with her fellow students.
He is a co-worker of Montag who works as a fireman of the future.
This is one of many robots of the future programmed to sniff out the chemistry of paper; it can immobilize living things by injecting them with morphine.
The last name of one of two named and identified firemen of the future who work with Guy Montag in order to burn every called-in and sniffed-out book.
Verticales
In Part 2 of the novel, when Montag reads a poem to his wife's friend, this friend of Montag's wife soon breaks down sobbing with tears, thereby revealing to astute readers her quite-strong-yet-totally suppressed feelings brought to the surface through the power of words.
He is a retired English professor who cowardly had allowed future government leaders to begin censorship and eventually to outlaw the possession of each-and-every book.
He tells the Montag family a convenient (and quite false) intellectual history from the perspective of an imaginary and troubled future dystopian society that has evolved to ban all books.
Described as a man with "ravenous hands," this dystopian fireman of-the-future, as the story's protagonist, takes books from the houses that he goes to in order to burns; smart readers probably wonder if he himself knows how to read those hidden books that he placed inside air ventilation ducts of his future home.
This storyteller tells its story with omniscient knowledge of the future, focuses its telling upon the life of just one heroic character, and uses hundreds of metaphors, similes, or other forms of figurative language or "tropes."
This leader of people only appears in the third section of the novel Fahrenheit 451; he leads the mysterious so-called "Book People."
Addicted to sedatives, somehow she loves to read phony prepared TV scripts; she cannot remember how she met her husband Guy Montag.
From the future, this lady is one of a group of three social friends; she appears to readers as careless about her life which has included one husband who committed suicide and two current children who both despise her.