Rating: Summary: A Masterpiece Of Political Speculation Review: Orwell's masterpiece is a book to be treasured. Read it purely for its entertainment value, or read it for its disturbing view of politics in our world. '1984' is a novel that has become a classic because it raises issues that are pertinent to our society - even today, more than a decade after the time the novel was set in. This book gives you an entirely new perspective of the world around you - how much of it can you believe, and how much of it is truth "through the eyes of the Party"? Themes including war, politics, love, truth and betrayal are all discussed in a novel that will leave you with a broader understanding of the world, life and mankind.
Rating: Summary: Pshychological Masterrpiece!! Review: This book altered the way I conceived thought and memory. It showed us a world where people had no control over what they remember. 1984 not only a fantastic book but but a piece of literature that intrigues the deepest parts of our minds. Please read this book!!!
Rating: Summary: Read it. Review: This book is wonderfully depressing and should be plastered on the walls of schools and goverement buildings.Please mail me if you like or dislike thsi book.
Rating: Summary: Brilliant Review: The greatest book ever to be put to print. The first time I read it I became utterly depressed, but I knew the book was too good to be merrely dismissed as depressing. So I reread it and found it a harrowing novel. Helplessness is the best word to describe the feeling of this novel.
Rating: Summary: One of the the best books ever written. Review: George Orwell was a genius when writing this book. This book is pure genius! I reccomend everyone to read this book. It shows how much we really have in life, and that we need to protect our freedom and rights at all costs. It would be a nightmare to live in his world
Rating: Summary: Very nice, very nice work indeed Review: I found this book to be very revealing, and also a bit scary. Not scary in the 'boogy man' way, but in the 'this could happen' way. If he was still alive, i'd tip my hat to Mr. Orwell.
Rating: Summary: Big Brother Is Watching! Review: An absolutely phenomenal book written half a century ago depicting what life could become by the year 1984. What a vivid imagination Orwell possessed as he created a futuristic world in which everything is strictly monitored. Everyone in the book seems to be frightened to death to go against the system. I had heard my,"Big Brother," speak of this book in my younger days and decided to explore the novel myself. Complete enjoyment is what I experienced while reading this wonderful piece of literature. Experience it for yourself whenever you can because it's well worth the time. I would like to thank the reader from Washington State for the recommendation of the sequel to 1984 as I had no idea that it existed.
Rating: Summary: Captivating Review: Although I used to read books all the time (mostly teen series like the Baby-Sitters Club), I rarely find one these days that I can stand to read for more than 10 minutes. A few, however, I have been unable to put down and one of those is 1984. This book compelles the reader to think, something so few people do today. It is incredibly frightening to think about living in such a tightly controlled society where one cannot even hold one's own opinions! To live without love and sex and opinions or emotion of any kind is truly terrifying. The book is so enthralling, I could not finish it the first 2 times I read it. Imagining the depths of the Ministry of Love and thinking about what would await me in my own personal Room 101 gave me nightmares. No other book has produced such an effect on me. It doesn't matter how accurate he was about communism or whether or not communism is really bad. The fact remains that it is a wonderfully written and incredibly creative piece of work.
Rating: Summary: This is my favorite book of all time! Review: I first read this book 4 years ago, at the age of 13, and it became one of the most important influences on my life. When I finished it for the first time, I was simply amazed, and have read it four times since. One thing I'd like to say about this novel: stop regarding it as 'political'! People make alot of references to it when talking politics (ie the relations between PC and Newspeak, etc) but this isn't the book's main purpose. This is a book about a man struggling to find freedom, happiness and truth under an oppressive government of power freaks. It also asks philosophical and psychological questions, such as 'what is truth?', and 'what does it take to break the human spirit?' , which are masterly integrated into the plot. The aesthetics and reality of this novel are also great. It really adds to the suspense and mood of the novel. That's all I have to say. When you're done and feel like something a little more uplifting, read its 1994 sequel, "Orwell's Revenge"
Rating: Summary: Worst book ever. Review: Orwell is not my favorite author, obviously. 1984 may have been the crux of his career, but for me it is the worst book ever. It is most obviously an attempt at satire of communism. The thing here is, does the author or any of his readers know what communism is? There are so many parallels between 1984 and Animal Farm, his other acclaimed book. Big Brother is Napoleon, of course. (parody of Stalin) Snowball is Goldstein (parody of Trotsky). The windmill is the Flying Fortress, what keeps being rebuilt over and over. There is little original about this novel. How do the numerous sexually abundant scenes in this book help its role as a satire? All that happens is Winston has sex with Julia. There is a constant war with a country, and the hint is that Oceania is THE only country in the world. Does this hint that communism creates a warlike society? Communism in its true form is a state no government has yet achieved. It occurs when the level fo technology becomes so great that machines do all the dirty work (i.e. growing crops, making clothes) and humanity can devote itself to higher, sophisticated pursuits, like drama or science. It is originally a state of peace, not war. There is no money in a society. There is no government, because everyone can do what they want to do. So bleak compared to Orwell's paranoia. Communism is too often regarded as the "bad thing." Nobody really understands it. Did Orwell? The fact that he was once a member of the Communist Party makes no difference. As Richard Wright pointed out, Americans in that party hardly understood it either.
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