Rating: Summary: Highly Recommended Review: Don't let any preconceptions discourage you from reading this book. Yes it is short. Yes the writing can be understood by someone rather young. Yes the Cold War is over and communism's role in the world is greatly reduced. However, this book remains important and enjoyable. The the story of the animal revolution (and the gradual erosion of the values it once stood for) is a thinly veiled allegory for communism. However, more broadly it can represent the unpleasant mutation of any social or political movement. Bottom line: this is a classic that still rings true. The short time invested reading this novel will produce high returns.
Rating: Summary: Satire At It's Best Review: The greatest depiction of the Russian Revolution ever constructed. When I picked up this book, I thought it could never surpass "1984", but it did. It is amazing to me, how you can get so attached to these characters, even though there isn't that much dialouge. I recommend this book to everyone.
Rating: Summary: Good Satire Review: I had to read this book for school, and at first, I thought, "Oh great, another stupid book about political events." I was surprised to find out that it was a very good book. It's a good way to learn about the events of the Russian Revolution, and the story is truely unique and humourous. It's a good book to read when you just don't have anything to do.
Rating: Summary: One of the best books I have read Review: This book is a true classic. The way Orwell related the revolution to a farm is genious. I read this book as a sophmore in high school, and i believe that every student should do the same. This is a very easy read, you can finish it in less than a week EASILY. But the story will stick with you for a lifetime. Amazing read!
Rating: Summary: OVER RATED!! Review: This book is, without a doubt, the most over rated "classic" I have ever read. It's not like there are multiple themes and ideas up for discussion here. The book has one point that it beats to death over and over again. Why anybody would ever need Cliffs notes to figure out what the book is about is beyond me. If you read the first 20 pages, you already know how the book is going to end. What, you mean the pigs gave themselves even MORE power? Shocking! I never saw that one coming! Save your energy for a book worth reading.
Rating: Summary: The Book I Recently Read Review: This book takes place somewhere in a farm in England. The book starts with all the animals meeting together in one big barn called by Major, an old pig who tries to pass on his will to the rest of the animals (since he knew that he was going to die from age), telling them to dislike mankind. What makes this a four star book is the human characteristics and ideas(tactics) of each animal. Such lines like,"The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man agin" seems to be some kind of theme on humans. I personally like this book for its level of English and its nonfictional presence.
Rating: Summary: George Orwell is visionary Review: While this book is clearly a satire on the Russian Revolution, what fascinated me the most was how, decades and decades later, it still applies to us today. I was especially fascinated by the role of Squealer, the propagandist for the leader of Animal Farm. It struck me how well he was able to protect the leaders by using common scare tactics ("Listen to Napoleon or Mr. Jones will come back") and changing the rules, or commandments, to suit the desires of Napoleon (adding the words "in excess" to the commandment that animals are not to drink liquor). This book explores the possibility of a utopian society and is closely fashioned to the vision of the communist party. While its founders have good intentions (Ol' Major and Snowball), the downfall comes from overzealous, greedy, and corrupted leaders (Napoleon). Can Utopia be created? There are many, many lessons to be learned from this book. There is something for us all, especially if you are interested at all in politics. It is good to remember this book so that we, unlike the animals on Animal Farm, don't slowly become enslaved by the leaders sworn to protect us. Notice the word slowly. At the beginning, a revolution takes place where the Animals take over the farm, establish their noble 7 commandments of Animalism, and the people appoint Napoleon and Snowball to guide them in their new society. Napoleon is quick to take power from Snowball and begins using Animal Farm for his own greedy purposes. He abandons and changes the rules of Animalism to suit his purposes. Old traditions, such as the anthem sung by Ol' Major and the markings on the flags symbolizing the work of the common beast, are done away with. So are the committees created by Snowball for the improvement of the animals. Napoleon surrounds himself by bodyguards and, through an act of cleansing many of his enemies, begins to rule the farm in fear. No animal seems too shocked when the pigs begin to walk upright like their enemy, but are more shocked to see the whips come out again. In the end, the leaders become the very people that Animal Farm was created to be protected from and are duped into a worst lifestyle than was given to them previously for the welfare of the leaders. This didn't happen overnight, this happened over the course of a few years. In fact, most of the animals on Animal Farm weren't even part of the original revolution.
Rating: Summary: Workers of the world UNITE!! (or should we?) Review: This is a brilliant piece of fiction. George Orwell is a superb political commentator. His satire is never so heavy that he forces the reader to see the Russian Revolution in the same way that he saw it. However, it is that subtlety that allows the reader to see the Revolution that way. The downtrodden lower classes, the animals on a farm, realize that they are the ones doing all of the work, not Mr. Jones, the symbol of the establishment. Once the animals have rounded up the troops, a Revolution commences. I don't want to risk changing the effect this book can have on the reader by giving away too many details on the following government, for that is where the absurdity of the Revolution's ideals really begin to show, but I'll just say that the leaders of the farm become corrupt by the power that they have acquired. _Animal Farm_ is hard to outdo in terms of Political Satire, and I think that it deserves all of the admiration it receives. Orwell has a wonderful knack for taking very complex issues and making them simpler than you would have thought possible if you had not read him.
Rating: Summary: Communism in the real world (talking animals excepted)... Review: Orwell's satire of Soviet Communism and the death of Utopia is one of the standards of political satire of the twentieth century. The motto that "All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others" resonates through this story as the major failure of Communism. The story begins on a farm where the animals have had enough of their human owner and stage a revolt. Initially, all animals are equal, but soon enough, the pigs take control and slowly turn the Farm into a dictatorship, while perverting the original commandments laid down after the Revolution. Lenin, Stalin, Trotsky and the NKVD are well-represented by various animal characters, as are the show trials and massive state projects undertaken by the Soviets. Most compelling are the workers, especially the horse Boxer, whose motto, "I will work harder," is a simple mantra of the optimism of the Revolution and the willingness to carry whatever load is asked, for the good of the Farm. When Boxer is no longer useful, he is ungloriously disposed of, with little regard or thanks for his years of backbreaking labor. The end of the Book is simply Communism as Orwell saw it in his time: a corrupt regime ignoring and robbing its people, while making friends and mixing with those it claimed were the enemy, to the point where it was impossible to tell them apart. Orwell had first-hand experience dealing with the Stalinist brand of communism while he was fighting in Spain, and obviously realized that instead of cultivating a workers' paradise, Communism had spawned a culture of fear and lies. This is a great story written in tragic fashion, all the more sad when you realize that the small farm is a metaphor for millions of people and an entire nation, under the thumb of a merciless and corrupt government.
Rating: Summary: Animal Farm review: Review: I know that this book was written as a satire of communism, and I'm sure that's been drilled into everyone's head a thousand times over. I won't talk about that; instead, I'll talk about what the books means to me. I skirted around reading this book for a while because the subject seemed like something I wouldn't be particularly interested in, but I was wrong. Animal Farm was started on an idea that was planted in the mind of the other animals by an old and respected farm figure -- Old Major. He had a dream that animals would take their place as the true heirs of the land. After Old Major dies, a revolution takes place on the farm, and the animals overthrow the owner, Mr. Jones, and claim the farm as their own. At first, things went as planned. All animals were equal, and many things were done with the good of the animals in mind. Then, the pigs (who were smarter than other animals, naturally) began to slowly warp this dream into something more cruel and deceitful until the animals can hardly distinguish between the pigs and Man. I think this story can apply to any form of government. The pigs kept the other animals in line by telling them what they wanted to hear or using excessive force -- much like many governments in the world today. They twisted and warped the thoughts of the masses, making themselves look more heroic and "for the masses". They even had the scapegoat in the form of a banished pig named Snowball on which all their problems were blame. "Blame Snowball" seemed to be an underlying motto in the book. The pigs benefited from the prosperity of the farm while it's other inhibitants suffered. Most of the animals were fiercely loyal, and the pigs misused this trust. A great example is Boxer who worked harder than anyone on the farm, and when he was no longer useful to the farm, he was suddenly an expendable asset (and you can imagine what happens from there). And you can see hints of that in any society. I never expected to enjoy this book as much as I did, and it will definitely be a part of my library for years to come.
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