Book cover of Animal Farm

Book description

The perfect edition for any Orwell enthusiasts' collection, discover Orwell's classic dystopian masterpiece beautifully reimagined by renowned street artist Shepard Fairey

'All animals are equal. But some animals are more equal than others.'

Mr Jones of Manor Farm is so lazy and drunken that one day he forgets to feed…

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Why read it?

16 authors picked Animal Farm as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

I re-read Animal Farm this year. For those of us in high school in the 1980s in the US, Animal Farm was a standard part of our English curriculum. I always cynically considered this was because it is such a short novel, but now I realize that this economy of words is an aspect of the book’s brilliance. The prose is plain, sharp, and efficient. Orwell was able to transform the complex geopolitical conflicts of his time into a simple and entertaining allegory about farm animals. He was a master storyteller!

I found this a fun and brilliant story. I actually read it to my three nieces when they were 5, 7, and 11. It was great hearing their opinions on the story.  It’s one of those books that can be understood on different levels. 

In the simplest form, it is exactly what is written on the pages—a story about some farm animals who take over the farm. However, there are many layers to this simple tale. 

I love being able to re-read a book and understand it on a different level each time. To me, that is excellent writing, especially…

I love this book because it is a wonderful example of a creative contradiction: It is the most accurate analysis of the dynamics of 20th-century grand politics and, at the same time, a simple fable for children.

What I find so fascinating is that it speaks to my feelings as well as to my intellect. As I am currently–in the face of geopoliticsalso often torn apart into contradictions between mood and the wish for analytical clarity, reading a fable, which at the same time carries consolidating rationality, gives me trust in human creativity. Humanism will prevail.

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Book cover of The Body by the Shore

The Body by the Shore by Tabish Khair,

Harris Maloub, a killer with an erased official past, now in his fifties, is visited by someone who could not be alive and given an assignment. In Aarhus, Denmark, Jens Erik, police officer on pre-retirement leave, somehow cannot forget the body of a Black man recovered from the sea some…

I return to this book again and again – and I do so as a Socialist. It is storytelling at its very best; the analogy of the farm animal's revolt is brilliance. If ever a book predicted the reality of history and humanity through their failings, it is Animal Farm.

You immediately bond with the animals and their struggles, but the insidious nature of the pig's totalitarian regime as later created, soon returns the reader to reality. One is left to understand that Karl Marx hit the nail on the head; Socialism cannot exist without being born of a…

When we think of scary animals we think of gnashing teeth and tearing claws, but obviously Orwell’s famous parable presents a very different kind of malevolence: that of overweaning ambition and our deep-seated instinct to control.

The pigs that present themselves as heroes and then slowly, greedily, inexorable turn into murderous dictators, forcing the other animals to do their bidding and then slaughtering them when they become too old, are of course not really pig-like at all—they are human-like, and therefore all the more terrifying. 

From Ben's list on malevolent beasts.

A group of animals rises against their owner, a dysfunctional farmer with a penchant for alcohol. They build a parallel society on the farm’s grounds, led by a couple of charismatic pigs and seven commandments. 

One of my biggest influences is George Orwell. Animal Farm was to be expected here: it is a cornerstone of satirical novels’ legacy. But beyond the praises, the novel’s broad coverage and reach in academic settings, Orwell’s massive brand recognition… What makes Animal Farm such an amazing exercise in storytelling? One word: timeless. Originally written to mock the former Soviet bloc, Animal Farm shapeshifts based…

From Andre's list on highly political satirical.

If you love George Orwell...

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Book cover of Norman Mailer at 100: Conversations, Correlations, Confrontations

Norman Mailer at 100 by Robert J. Begiebing,

Winner of the Robert F. Lucid Award for Mailer Studies.

Celebrating Mailer's centenary and the seventy-fifth publication of The Naked and the Dead, the book illustrates how Mailer remains a provocative presence in American letters.

From the debates of the nation's founders, to the revolutionary traditions of western romanticism,…

I first read this at school, and it fascinated and terrified me at the same time in portraying how power corrupts leaders, how language acts as a device to persuade us that day is night, and how even a morally upright stand against tyranny can descend into an even worse tyranny. The lessons are not just about the decay at the heart of the Bolsheviks in Russia but about how we need to think about leadership, especially political leadership. In democratic systems, we consistently strive to elect and promote the best leaders available, but perhaps this isn’t the most important…

It’s impossible to talk about dystopian fiction without mentioning George Orwell. But rather than recommend his seminal 1984, I prefer his more subversive Animal Farm. While the novella is a satirical allegory of the Russian Revolution and Stalinist Soviet, its appeal and lessons are much broader. After the animals of Manor Farm stage a revolt and drive their drunken master off the property, they establish a doctrine of ‘all animals are equal’ and the maxim "Four legs good, two legs bad." But as the pigs begin to assert their governance, and then their dominance, the lofty ideals of…

From Mikhaeyla's list on dystopian to feed your rebellious spirit.

In this classic tale, farm animals revolt against human tyranny only to discover that an incremental slide into a totalitarian state is eminently worse. The first time I read Animal Farm, I couldn’t put it down. Each page horrified me even more than the last as its allegory pulled back the curtain to uncover just how nasty people can be to each other. Animal Farm is a quick and disgusting tale about the ultimate selfishness of humanity, and I reach for it when I want to be creeped out.

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Book cover of Virtual Insanity

Virtual Insanity by Kevin Klehr,

A dystopian tale about Tayler's brush with deadly augmented reality players who are out to kill him, and a wise cracking robot keen to take over the world.

As reviewer Joseph Sullivan from Aurealis magazine wrote, “Virtual Insanity will resonate with readers who enjoy modern takes on science fiction…

Even though this is another book by the same author, it can’t be left off this list. For one, it’s a very easy read, almost like a child’s storybook. And, once again, you’ll gain first-hand knowledge of slogans such as “Some animals are more equal than others.” You may even wince when the sheep in the story start chanting…familiar, isn’t it?

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Book cover of The Body by the Shore

The Body by the Shore by Tabish Khair,

Harris Maloub, a killer with an erased official past, now in his fifties, is visited by someone who could not be alive and given an assignment. In Aarhus, Denmark, Jens Erik, police officer on pre-retirement leave, somehow cannot forget the body of a Black man recovered from the sea some…

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