Animal farm

a fairy story

No cover

George Orwell: Animal farm (2007, Penguin in association with Martin Secker & Warburg Ltd.)

113 pages

English language

Published Aug. 18, 2007 by Penguin in association with Martin Secker & Warburg Ltd..

ISBN:
978-0-14-103349-5
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OCLC Number:
476297304

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(2 reviews)

A tragic fable telling what happens when the animals drive out Mr. Jones and attempt to run their farm themselves.

171 editions

Boy! Orwell really doesn't like Stalin.

As a piece of writing, it's engaging, easy to read, and well crafted. This is no surprise, as Orwell's a great writer that—though he lacks subtlety—is able to deliver his thoughts well without the reader feeling written down to.

I see a lot of reviews state that this book is "prescient"—much like they say about another of his: 1984—but this isn't in the way people think. Though Orwell died in the '50s, Animal Farm is less-prescient about our sudden turn to authoritarianism, and more prescient towards the fall of the Soviet Union. While Orwell intended Napoleon to be a caricature of Stalin, what we get instead is a composite image of all the leaders of the Soviet Union to some degree or another. I imagine the Napoleon of the last chapter to be more Yeltsin than Stalin, though there's no way Orwell could've known that.

This ties into my critiques …

Subjects

  • Animals
  • Fiction