The Orwell Reader: Fiction, Essays, and Reportage

by George Orwell

Paperback, 1961

Publication

Mariner Books (1961), Edition: First, 480 pages

Description

[1.] Prologue in Burma: Shooting an elephant -- A hanging -- From Burmese days -- [2.] The thirties: From Down and out in Paris and London -- How the poor die -- From A clergyman's daughter -- From Keep the aspidistra flying -- From The road to Wigan Pier -- From Homage to Catalonia -- From Coming up for air -- [3.] World War II and after: From The lion and the unicorn : socialism and the English genius -- England your England -- Rudyard Kipling -- Politics vs. literature : an examination of "Gulliver's travels"--Lear, Tolstoy and the Fool -- In defense of P.G. Wodehouse -- Reflections on Gandhi -- Second thoughts on James Burnham -- Politics and the English language -- The prevention of literature -- "I write as I please": Decline of the English murder ; Some thoughts on the common toad ; A good word for the vicar of Bray -- Why I write -- From Nineteen eighty-four -- "Such, such were the joys ..."… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member wyclif
These essays demonstrate that Orwell was probably the greatest prose stylist in modern English literature. Highest rating.

Language

Original language

English

ISBN

0156701766 / 9780156701761

Physical description

480 p.; 5.3 inches

Pages

480

Library's rating

½

Rating

(31 ratings; 4)
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