This box set includes:
1) Burmese Days
Set in the days of the Empire, with the British ruling in
Burma, Orwell's book describes corruption and imperial bigotry. Flory, a white
timber merchant, befriends Dr Veraswami, a black enthusiast for the Empire,
whose downfall can only be prevented by membership at an all-white club.
2) A Clergyman's Daughter
Intimidated by her father, the rector of Knype Hill, Dorothy
performs her submissive roles of dutiful daughter and bullied housekeeper.
Her thoughts are taken up with the costumes she is making for the church school
play, by the hopelessness of preaching to the poor and by debts she cannot pay
in 1930’s Depression England. Suddenly her routine shatters and Dorothy finds
herself down and out in London. She is wearing silk stockings, has money in her
pocket and cannot remember her name. Orwell leads us through a landscape of
unemployment, poverty and hunger, where Dorothy's faith is challenged by a
social reality that changes her life.
3) Keep the Aspidistra Flying
In Keep the Aspidistra Flying, George Orwell has created a
darkly compassionate satire to which anyone who has ever been oppressed by the
lack of brass, or by the need to make it, will all too easily relate. He etches
the ugly insanity of what Gordon calls "the money-world" in
unflinching detail, but the satire has a second edge, too, and Gordon himself
is scarcely heroic. In the course of his misadventures, we become grindingly
aware that his radical solution to the problem of the money-world is no solution
at all--that in his desperate reaction against a monstrous system, he has
become something of a monster himself.
4) Coming Up for Air
George Bowling, the hero of Orwell's comic novel, is a
middle-aged insurance salesman who lives in an average English suburban row
house with a wife and two children. One day, after winning some money from a
bet, he goes back to the village where he grew up, to fish for carp in a pool
he remembers from thirty years before. The pool, alas, is gone, the village has
changed beyond recognition, and the principal event of his holiday is an
accidental bombing by the RAF.
5) Animal Farm
A farm is taken over by its overworked, mistreated animals.
With flaming idealism and stirring slogans, they set out to create a paradise
of progress, justice, and equality. Thus the stage is set for one of the most
telling satiric fables ever penned –a razor-edged fairy tale for grown-ups that
records the evolution from revolution against tyranny to a totalitarianism just
as terrible.
6) 1984
The new novel by George Orwell is the major work towards
which all his previous writing has pointed. Critics have hailed it as his
"most solid, most brilliant" work. Though the story of Nineteen
Eighty-Four takes place thirty-five years hence, it is in every sense timely.
The scene is London, where there has been no new housing since 1950 and where
the city-wide slums are called Victory Mansions. Science has abandoned Man for
the State. As every citizen knows only too well, war is peace. To Winston
Smith, a young man who works in the Ministry of Truth (Minitru for short), come
two people who transform this life completely. One is Julia, whom he meets
after she hands him a slip reading, "I love you." The other is
O'Brien, who tells him, "We shall meet in the place where there is no
darkness." The way in which Winston is betrayed by the one and, against
his own desires and instincts, ultimately betrays the other, makes a story of
mounting drama and suspense.
7) Down and Out in Paris and London
This unusual fictional memoir - in good part
autobiographical - narrates without self-pity and often with humour the
adventures of a penniless British writer among the down-and-outs of two great
cities. The Parisian episode is fascinating for its expose of the kitchens of
posh French restaurants, where the narrator works at the bottom of the culinary
echelon as dishwasher, or plongeur. In London, while waiting for a job, he
experiences the world of tramps, street people, and free lodging houses. In the
tales of both cities we learn some sobering Orwellian truths about poverty and
of society.
8) The Road to Wigan Pier
A searing account of George Orwell’s experiences of
working-class life in the bleak industrial heartlands of Yorkshire and
Lancashire, The Road to Wigan Pier is a brilliant and bitter polemic that has
lost none of its political impact over time. His graphically unforgettable
descriptions of social injustice, slum housing, mining conditions, squalor,
hunger and growing unemployment are written with unblinking honesty, fury and
great humanity.
9) Homage to Catalonia
In 1936 George Orwell travelled to Spain to report on the
Civil War and instead joined the fight against the Fascists. This famous
account describes the war and Orwell’s own experiences. Introduction by Lionel
Trilling.