Rating: Summary: Four legs (stars) good, two legs bad Review: I'm going to be a little different and give Animal Farms fours stars instead of five. I liked the book well enough, that's for sure. It is a very powerful little book (mine is 128 paperback pages) with political ramifications throughout. It would help if you understood history and political science, especially from the days when Orwell wrote this (1946). I give it four stars because, when I first finished the book in an English class, I was not fulfilled. Was it for politics sake? Was it to get by senior English? (Since then, I've taught the book to high school sophomores who, by the way, would probably also not give it five stars if they were polled). I don't know. It's certainly worth a read, though, and it might not be a bad idea to have the Cliff Notes near-by. It will illumine any number of symbolic meanings as you read the adventures of Napolean, Snowball, and Farmer Jones. Finally, check out the 1960s cartoon Animal Farm. It's a student favorite! Baaaaaaah.
Rating: Summary: Animal farm, human school Review: Amazing how such a small book can contain. Yes, humanity has always been so eager to believe what the leaders said that it has often blinded itself (and will again and again).A fable that actually works. An introduction to Orwell/Blair, that I do find more brilliant than 1984 in its sharpness. Definitely worth reading, and probably re-reading again and again.
Rating: Summary: Horses or Frogs? Review: One of the marks of a great work of literature is that it can be read on different levels. George Orwell's Animal Farm is such a work. We can read it as a child's fable or as a description of the 1917 Russian Revolution with Snowball-Trotski, Napoleon-Stalin, Old Major-Lenin (or is it Marx?) and Squealer-a collection of various Stalinist toadies- providing the history lesson. That can be instructive and we come away feeling that we understand the fundamental dynamics of totalitarianism, in all quite contented with ourselves. That would however be missing the most important point for Americans today that is brought out in the book. Dictatorship doesn't arise in one fateful moment, people don't become manipulated pawns overnight, rights are not eroded or even reversed with one blatant stroke of a pen on a governmental decree. If anything the history of 20th Century dictatorships shows us that this is a gradual process as in Orwell's book. Napoleon's plans are put into effect slowly; the laws are changed methodically one by one, at night when the animals are asleep. History itself is taken away and washed of any conflicting elements that displease the powers in control or bring up uncomfortable questions. Gross inequalities are said to be necessary, unavoidable, even positive, while a strong police presence backed with cruel punishments discourage any overt opposition. The most important element of control is to convince the people that things are "better" than before without actually telling them what the "before" was like. Convince them that theirs is the best of all possible worlds without really comparing it to anything else. Arouse their sense of patriotism and use popular symbols to distract and confuse. All this is shown in the book to be very effective in establishing and maintaining control, all the while the real condition of the animals/citizens only worsens, the manipulation and domination only becomes more obvious, more difficult to rationalize and explain away. Now for the clincher - How has OUR country changed in the last 20 years? Are we as a people more manipulated and dominated by unseen and unaccountable plutocratic elites, less in control of our supposedly democratic government than in 1980? Are we, the common people, not confronted today with a far more refined, more subtle type of control and domination, which allows us steadily decreasing room to move about, a constantly constricting pen so to speak, whose artificial veneer of "liberty" is wearing increasingly thin? Is it even allowed in polite company to pose such questions? A biologist friend of mine tells me that if a frog is put into a pan of hot water it will jump out, but put the same frog in a pan of cool water and gradually increase the temperature to boiling, the frog will stay in the pan until his eyes burst. Perhaps we Americans should ask ourselves where we are, metaphorically speaking, in the Animal Farm herarchy. Are we at least hard-working horses who occasionally question what is done supposedly in our name, or are we simple frogs, sweating now, only semi-sentient, but still smug and stupid in our belief that things will only get better?
Rating: Summary: Orwell's adult tale Review: Marketed as a children's tale due to its central characters, this book is a dense text, as is 1984 (he spent more time composing this than his masterpiece). A great tale chalk full Orwell nondidactically telling us, excuse me, showing us the world for the first time once again. Nietzsche's herd appears in the form of a "flock" of sheep. Highly recommended.
Rating: Summary: A fable for every generation to learn from. Review: I read this book last year for school, and quickly became entranced with it. So far, its the best book I have ever read (but that may changes since I'm getting very into literature, and reading more). It left me with a lesson about socialism that I'll never forget. Truly amazing.
Rating: Summary: Animal Farm Review Review: For my reading class I chose to read Animal Farm. The book is about a group of farm animals who take over Farm and over throw Jones the trayant farmer. Led by the pigs, the animals shun humanity and begin their own way of life. However, in time the pigs begin to obtain a power trip. They seem to establish a true dictatorship and as time goes on they become more like the race that they so despise.George Orwell sends a very clear message in this book. The message is that power brings out the pigs in us. This book is very true for almost any society today. Animal Farm is a very enjoyable, easy read. If you are looking for a book with a Deep meaning than Animal Farm is for you.
Rating: Summary: Animal Farm Review: I read this as a school asignment and I did not enjoy it. I did not really understand the meaning of the book. I guess it aplied to the world a while ago but I can't aply it to life today. It was rather confusing for me.
Rating: Summary: Animals Come to Power Review: This is an allegory based on the early years of life and politics of the Soviet Union. But it can be viewed as a general warning against polemical and all-too-optimistic utopian visions. I grew up in the Soviet Union, and I think Orwell was somehow able to capture the spirit of life there as precisely as a writer can. Led by their liberators, the pigs, oppressed and over-worked animals take matters into their own hands and expell their human masters. What follows is funny, at times, and tragic in general. This short and beautiful book is a must read.
Rating: Summary: A poor man's 1984 or intro to Orwell for kids... Review: What happens when farm animals invoke the sickle-and-hammer? This fairy tale tells you. It illustrates the horrors and seductions of collectivism, only it does so with farm animals.
Rating: Summary: Utopias are never perfect Review: This book is one of the greatest satire of all time, one of the motivating factors in the awareness of Communism's evil. Through his brilliant use of animals as in olden fables, Orwell holds a mirror to the state of humanity. Great book.
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