Animal Farm by George Orwell



ISBN: 978-0-141-03613-7
First published: 1945
Pages: 95
Binding: Paperback
Genre: Literary fiction
Price: INR 150
Author: George Orwell

 UCV saysAs if the Crosswords of the world weren't enough, the Flipkarts have joined in and made the world a rather difficult place for a bibliophile. With so many new authors every day, dozens of titles every week and multitudes of reviews, there’s always too much to read and too little time. In the times of shiny jackets craning their necks out of bookshelves, and their much-publicized insides egging a reader to sample one writer after another, it is rare to return to the works of the same author.

Not, if the author is someone like George Orwell. Most of Orwell’s works, iconic as they are, do not bear the tedium of other classics. It is not what Mark Twain famously said of them: A classic is something everybody wants to have read but nobody wants to read. With Orwell, you are sucked in, pinned down and feel compelled to lick every last word before devouring it and wanting more. At least that’s what ‘1984’ did to me once, and ‘Animal Farm’ has done to me again.

Orwell liked to call this book ‘Animal Farm: A Fairy Story’, but the publisher’s note in my Penguin edition mentions how many other publishers dropped the subtitle, and replaced it with ‘A satire’ or ‘A contemporary satire’; it is hard to call this book anything else. But Orwell’s original ironic subtitle serves the book well, exposes as it does the painful truths about human nature, albeit through animal characters. This book is a mirror reflecting truths that are so resounding and revolting, that men have not been able to stop looking at it since it was first published in 1945.

The basic plot of Animal Farm is seemingly simple. A group of farm animals revolt against their human master and take charge of the farm. But the revolution takes a rather unexpected course in time. It is in describing this awry evolution of a revolution that Orwell shows his genius. In Animal Farm he creates a miniature human society, with all the prototypes. There are shrewd and greedy pig-people, loyal dog-people, hardworking and honest horse-people, lazy cat-people and sheep-people with the herd mentality. He etches that hierarchical pyramid of power that emerges even in the freest of societies.

There’s a Bengali proverb I learnt from my mother: Je jaye Lankaye, shaye hoye Raavan, which means, ‘Whosoever goes to Lanka, becomes Raavan’. Orwell demonstrates just how power corrupts. Animal Farm resembles 1984 in many ways. They are both essentially stories about the rulers and the ruled and about the illusion that is freedom. Both the stories are about the few who will lead and trod upon the rest who will follow.

For every aspect about Animal Farm, there is only one adjective that comes to my mind: tremendous. The book is tremendous in its simplicity, tremendous in its style and tremendous in its message.

A special mention ought to be made about the cover design too. The Penguin edition has a simple, old-world illustration design overlaid artfully on newsprint. It portrays the theme beautifully. But other publications have equally beautiful covers, as I discovered while Googling it.

Add the reading of this book to your bucket list, if you haven’t already.

Rating: 5/5
Published by: Penguin Books


7 comments:

  1. This is one book I BADLY want to read but my thrillers always push it to back of the list .. I think this new year I will try to read all such books first and then touch any latest one .. Amazing review UCV ! As i alredy told , I jsut love to read your posts :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks a ton, Nimue! If my reviews can sell these wonderful books to even one person, it is worth writing them. Your encouragement means much.

    ReplyDelete
  3. yes!! this is a fantastic book!! absolutely loved the book, absolutely loved the review. great job!

    ReplyDelete
  4. @UCV: ur review really is extremely well written! n i 2 love this book; i must say, no one could have done more justice to it! :)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thank you so much, Arpita! Such generous comments can do wonders on a Tuesday morning! :)

    ReplyDelete
  6. Oh yes.. this is a classic.. quite famous and I've been meaning to read it. Good review.. now I am even more intrigued to read this book. Thanks! :)

    ReplyDelete
  7. Great review! i recollect being sucked into the bleak world Orwell created in 1984. The ending depressed me. I didnt want to pick up animal farm. After reading your review, may be I will.

    ReplyDelete

Keep reading, keep suggesting, keep commenting

Book Review: The Teacher by Freida Mcfadden

  It’s Sunday again and I picked up yet another Freida Mcfadden. ‘The Teacher’ is the author’s first release of the year and like her prev...