Rating: Summary: Hidden reality in a novel Review: This book reflects many aspects of our societies, in a clearly, detailed way, both good and bad ones.You may know the saying "history is written by the victors." 1984 goes deeper and explains you why they write (and rewrite) the history, how they do it, or how would they do it. The story becomes beatiful when describing love, peace, songs, and so on, but it is cruel when talking about punishments and total control (I skipped some pages). When reading the book you would either think "this is a novel" or "this is our society." But you might think "this is our society" after finishing the book, anyway. Not a book to enjoy, but for reflections.
Rating: Summary: Absolutely Enraptureing! Review: George Orwell writes an amazing book on one mans life, from what he thought 1984 would be like. it was stunning and wonderful. I definetly reccomend this book!! I had no idea what i would be reading when i came home from my sister's house when she gave me 1984.
Rating: Summary: A bleak and very possible future Review: 1984 George Orwell's most famous novel. Written in the 1950's, during a time of post WWII cleanup and violent revolutions in Central and Eastern Europe, 1984 plunges the World into a limited nuclear war, and the division of the planet into three superstates, which are constantly "at war" with each other. The main character and the leading lady live in the Superstate of Oceania, where Totalitarian Government controls every aspect of the lives of the citizens. Big Brother "watches" his citizens via the Thought Police, by means of spying on them, even in their homes, with electronic devices. Three words from this book, Thoughtcrime, Double Speak and Double Think have made their way into common English vocabulary. After reading the book, you are left with a hollow and helpless feeling. I recommend this book to everyone.
Rating: Summary: Not Just a Satire, a Warning Review: Being a ninth-grader, I looked over the required reading list for high-school and saw that later, incoming juniors had to read 1984. I don't know about you, but I looked at the book and in my opinion it looked quite bulky. I figured I should start reading it now and in two years I might finish it. Surprisingly, though, the book read awfully quickly. Parts of the book are so terrifyingly captivating that I was drawn in, and at points I just found myself reading faster and faster. The reason for this is: not only does Orwell use stunningly descriptive language combined with expert storytelling, the message is clear and profound: A government can only be as perfect as the people running it and living under it, and we should not try to make people perfect. By purging man of evil, we also destroy his good, and drain all humanity from him. Orwell gives future peoples a choice: a perfect society in which people are mindless drones, or a society in which we are human and do our best. In the story, we see a society in which people cannot step one toe out of line, or they are swept away to the Ministry of Love, a vividly and horrifically described torture chamber where one is mutilated physically, mentally and emotionally until one corrects his way of thinking to match that of the Party, an all-powerful upper-class which can very well proclaim that 2+2=5. After reading "Animal Farm," I expected "1984" to be a satire on government of the day. I found it hard to believe that the two books were written by the same author. "1984" is much, much deeper and warns us that a greater power than the government of our day may soon arise to steal away our humanity. Since we are supposed to be the future, I suggest that any high school students read this book (hey, it's probably going to be required reading sooner or later, right?) Orwell takes the reader from the depths of fear to the height of romantic literature to a spark of hope and then back to fear again in a highly powerful novel, and a good read.
Rating: Summary: WOW Review: 1984 was not a book, it was an experience. Possibly one of the most thought provoking and intriguing books I have ever read, 1984 tells a tale of a "future" as Orwell envisioned it in 1949. Although 1984 is long gone, Orwell's tale is still as haunting as ever. It tells of a totalitarian society, where Big Brother is constantly watching every single move Party members make through a device called a telescreen, and it is a crime to even THINK a thought that is anti-party. The party controls everything. If a person were to so much as LOOK discontented with a party decision, they would be tortured until they loved big brother. Which brings us to Winston, the main character in the book. He is quite obviously discontented with the party. He takes many risks, such as getting involved in a love affair, writing a diary where he recorded "Down with big brother", and getting involved with an underground brotherhood. However, he does this in such a blatant way, that he is almost setting himself up to be caught. He yearns to be killed for his political heresy. Which makes the ending all the more ironic. This book is truly one of the most interesting reads. Orwell's novel is very rightly called a classic. This timeless masterpiece will always serve as a warning to the dangers of a totalitarian state, and if not that, just to the upholding of the importance of free thought and speech.
Rating: Summary: Finished Wanting More Review: George Orwells 1984 is by far my favoirte book of all time. As of last year you would have to pay me to read , but my first year of highschool seemed to be a real slap in the face. We read over14books this year. Most i would read only because i had to , but with 1984 something was differnt. I read 1984 with full intrest until the very last word. The basis of the story was all i needed , all the added details were just one of the many bonuses. These days people are so concerned with their reputations in society that no one will stand up for what they believe in . This was a refreshing read to break up all the social "stuffy-ness" and made me believe , if u stand up for what is right then you will get results.
Rating: Summary: Great read Review: This book is a great read. It has one of the most powerful endings to any book I have ever read. Not quite as good as A Brave New World in my eyes, but close. The plot basically centers around two people's personal rebellion agains the now infamous "Big Brother". Any serious reader should have not only read this book, but should have it in their library. No matter how much time passes since it was written, it is still a relevant book.
Rating: Summary: This book reads like stereo instructions Review: Many people that I have spoken to that have read this book have downplayed it's genious and told me of it's tediousness. When I chose this book for an Independent Reading Project in my English class, mostly out of spite and interest in the title, I was brought into a world of tolatanarist leadership and of a little man struggling to find himself. I'll admit, the book itself is difficult reading, but at the same time is very descriptive and almost fortelling of an apocolyptic disaster. There is not one boring point throughout the entire book, and at every turn, someone is decieving someone else and the world is revolving again. I recommend this book to anyone who has the knowledge to comprehend stereo instructions but at the same time, fully understands them. This book is full of symbols and if you can't figure them out in the beginning, you will be lost at the end.
Rating: Summary: Required Reading for the inhabitants of the New World Order Review: I just read this book for the firdt time (May 2003). Although it was written in the 1950's, one should not underestimate its relevance. This is a powerful work that shows what could have happened in Western Europe if WWIII actually happened. You become Winston (the main character) and you can identify with his life, which consists of a horribly boring job at the "Ministry of Truth" and who is, along with every other human being on Earth, is constantly watched by the Thought Police, which also bans all resistance tools. You become aware of the struggle that is Winston's (main character) desire to get away (with Julia) from the all-oppresssive Total Government Control of all aspects of human life. I would suggest this book as required reading for everyone... Big Brother is Watching You... The imagery and horror say it all.
Rating: Summary: 1984 Review: Filed under the Dystopian section of fiction, 1984's cynical vision of an unsuperable dictatorship is a classic and profound work of literature. As in Orwell's first novel, Animal Farm, 1984 exudes great amounts of irony and symbolism in an incisive and meaningful way. The story consists of a brief chronology of events in Winston Smith's life. Winston is a disillusioned and repressed worker in the city of Oceania, a militaristic superstate. Winston believes that the bleek status quo was much better in his past, but do to the laws executed by Big Brother, the ubiquitous figurehead of the government, history itself has become alterable and destructible, and Winston can't mesh his thoughts into a coherent pattern. As Winstons circadian afflictions begin to grow on him heavily, a stroke of luck graces his misfortunate life when a beautiful young girl named Julia, who Winston was previously skeptical of, confides her love in him. Julia revigorates Winston's life and becomes an evergrowing source of light and happiness to his newly formed being. On a balmy June day, Winston and Julia's seperate peace is suddenly extirpated by a surprising twist of fate- Winston's kindly old friend Mr. Charington (owner of Winston and Julia's garret), who seems unaffected by the party, betrays Winston and divulges his whereabouts to the Thought Police, a sophisticated and merciless law enforcing team. From here on, things rapidly decline for Winston. He is beaten, tortured, humiliated, and deprived of any small solace to help him. During this period of debasement and castigation, Winston is interogated by his fellow worker named O'Brian, who Winston looks at with idyllic love and compassion throughout the course of the novel. In the paramount scene of the novel set in Room 101, O'Brian quashes all logic and sense that Winston tries to use against the Party, and succeedes in destroying every ounce of humanity left in Winston, forcing him to love Big Brother and betray Julia. 1984 displays George Orwell's outstanding brilliance in an earnest, captivating fashion. Orwell's desperate, seemingly hopeless forebodings to society as a whole are thought to have been addressed to Communist or Nazi regimes, whose terrible dictatorships brought about the deaths of millions of innocent people. However, Orwell clearly illustrates that mutiny against any tryanical government is futile. One may be lead to believe that Orwell was a cynical, desolate individual focusing only on the bad or injurious parts of a civilization and the hopelessness of autonomous efforts to enhance goodness in a society. Contrary to this idiology, I believe Orwell's 1984 is a an ingenius device that accurately portrays a society that will be formed from ignorance and repression, but through such a powerful novel, Orwell disseminates his profound and wise message to the masses, and aptly conveys his yearning for a just and egalitarian society for everyone.
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