George Orwell

George Orwell

George Orwell (born Eric Arthur Blair on June 25, 1903 – January 21, 1950) was an influential English novelist, essayist, and critic, best known for his powerful critiques of totalitarianism and social injustice. Born in Motihari, India, to a British family, Orwell was educated at Eton College before joining the Indian Imperial Police in Burma. His experiences there fueled his disdain for imperialism and shaped his literary voice.

Orwell’s first major work, Down and Out in Paris and London (1933), depicted the struggles of the impoverished in two major cities and was published under his pen name. He gained acclaim with novels such as Animal Farm (1945), a satirical allegory of the Russian Revolution, and Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949), a dystopian narrative that explores themes of surveillance, censorship, and authoritarianism. Both works remain highly relevant and are considered classics of modern literature.

Throughout his career, Orwell wrote extensively on political and social issues, advocating for democratic socialism and critiquing oppressive regimes. His essays, including Shooting an Elephant and Politics and the English Language, further established his reputation as a keen observer of human behavior and societal structures. Orwell’s legacy endures through his profound impact on literature and political thought, making him one of the most significant writers of the 20th century.

  • Satire, Dystopia, History
  • 1903
  • Male
  • 2
  • 1984 (Nineteen eighty-four) Waisa1984 (Nineteen eighty-four)
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    1984 (Nineteen Eighty-Four)

    In a world where every thought is monitored and every truth is manufactured, one man dares to remember what it means to be free. 1984 is a harrowing descent into a society ruled by fear, where language is weaponized, love is treason, and the past is endlessly rewritten. As the walls close in, the quiet rebellion of a solitary mind becomes a question with no easy answer: can the human spirit survive when even reality is no longer its own? Stark, prophetic, and unrelenting, this is a story of resistance in the age of absolute control.

    • Originally Published: June 8, 1949
    • Publisher: Penguin Books, 2008
    • Genre: Science fiction, Dystopian Fiction, Social science fiction, Political fiction
    • Pages: 1231
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0241969694
    • Access: Members
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    Animal Farm

    On a quiet farm, where the animals rise in revolt against their human masters, an ideal of freedom is born—only to curdle into tyranny beneath the hoofprints of power. Animal Farm is a fable sharpened into a political blade, where noble dreams decay into slogans, and those who promise equality learn to walk upright over the backs of others. How does liberation become a new form of control, and why do the oppressed so often trade one master for another? With deceptively simple prose and chilling clarity, this tale reveals that the most dangerous lies are the ones we tell ourselves. A story for every age, it asks: who truly governs when all are supposed to be free?

    • Originally Published: August 1945
    • Genre: Novella, Political Satire
    • Pages: 101
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9780451526342
    • Access: Members