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Title: Animal Farm by George Orwell, Alan Bennett ISBN: 0-88646-106-5 Publisher: Dh Audio Pub. Date: July, 1986 Format: Audio Cassette Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $16.99 |
Average Customer Rating: 4.41 (883 reviews)
Rating: 4
Summary: Animals vs. Humans Rebellion
Comment: The book Animal Farm is a fantastic illustration of communism in the world today. Fiurst, an old pig on an English farm has a dream about the animals rebelling against the humans. The old pig dies, but his dream still lives on with the animals. Then, the animals rebellion happens unexpectedly because the farmer has not fed them. The humans were run off the farm. Also, there is a rivalry on the farm between two pigs. One is named Napoleon, and one is named Snowball. The rivalry ends when Snowball gets forced off the farm by Napoleon's guards. Then Napoleon is in total control of the farm. He alters the commmandments that Snowball had written. Next, the pigs on the farm have broken all of their animal traits. The animals on the farm are unable to tell teh difference between the pigs and the humans. It's like the pigs are a reflection of the humans. Due to the reason above this book reflects how communism occurs in countries. I would definitely recommend people read Animal Farm. First, this book shows a reflection of human nature in a communist environment. It shows the pigs on the farm taking what they need to get a task done. Napoleon eleminates anybody that gets in his way of ruling the farm. Also, the book shows a great deal of teamwork between the animals. The animals on the farm built a windmill and a storm destroyed it, and they just worked harder and faster to build another windmill. Finally, it shows a good relationship amongst the animals on the farm. Boxer, a work horse, was a role model for everybody on the farm besides the pigs. He would never give up on anything. He always would work harder and faster to get things done. He would make certain sacrifices to help the farm. Overall, I think people should read Animal Farm.
Rating: 5
Summary: Review of The Animal Farm
Comment: George Orwell's The Animal Farm is a great book that bridges the gap between history and fiction. This easy-to-read book is a story of "Manor Farm" and the many animals that live there. At first glance it may appear to be an extra long children's story, however, the reader will soon pick up on the underlying story. This fable is allegorical in nature due to the fact that it tells the story of Soviet communism. This is a story that features a workers' revolt where the working class (the animals) rise up against an oppressive ruling class (humans). This revolt resembles the revolt advocated by Karl Marx, the so-called "father of communism". The animals' revolt against their oppressors only leads to a much harsher oppression within a dictatorship, once again pointing to the Soviet brand of communism. Orwell paints an accurate picture throughout this story of both the dictatorship, which is represented by pigs, and the lesser working class, which is the rest of the animals. Despite the serious nature of Orwell's message, there is some comedy as well as action that make this story a good read. Although this book was originally published in 1946, it is still relevant today. In today's world there are still residual effects of Soviet communism as well as many dictatorships. By reading The Animal Farm one is able to understand the oppressive nature of a dictatorship, and of communism in its impure state, which will allow one to have a better understanding of the tactics dictators use to seize and remain in power. This understanding will also shed light on the events occuring throughout the world today in the form of war and strife. This short book that resembles the nursery rhyme "Old McDonald's Farm" is a much more complex story than it appears. Anyone who considers themselves to be an historian or a casual reader could benefit from reading this classic tale.
Rating: 4
Summary: Aping their Betters
Comment: Orwell's 1946 "Fairy Story" and political masterpiece offers a
timeless warning about the dangers of a totalitarian state. Unfortunately the all-too-human nature of the animals who engaged in this egalitarin experiment are destined to recreate
the inevitable abuse of absolute power: lust for still more power, greed for material comforts, plus the surprising and
unrestrained cruelty toward the other animals who were naive enough to trust their leaders for protection. And worst of all--the tendancy of the other farm creatures to behave like sheep by not raising their collective voices to protest the rampant
deception.
The characters in this novel are animals who behave in a painfully human manner. Although the ideologies of Socialism and Communism are not specifically named, the effects of revolution are terrifyingly familiar from recent 20th century
history. Old Major--a wise and repsected pig--calls the animals of Manor Farm to an evening assembly. Outlining his dream of a more democratic and benevolent lifestyle for all farm aniamls, he
instills in them the idea of rebellion, which will be followed by an almost utopian existence. The emerging leader pigs under him devise the Seven Commandments, which should provide for general peace and prosperity.
Alas, after his death his two successors, Snowball and Napoleon, vie for power. They maniuplate both the facts and the written ideas to their own private purposes of self-aggrandizement. Suspicion, paranoia, deceit and cruelty define the new age of porcine rule. Animal dissidents are converted, silenced or removed, as the memory of actual history is gradually lost in a haze of clever rhetoric and retribution.
One by one the rights of the hard-working animals are stripped away or distorted for Napoleon's private agenda--the dream of a peaceful retirement is forgotten. Worst of all, the revised rules permit an oligarchy to sink to human vices; eventually the rulers become barely distinguishable from the humans they vowed to shun. Orwell raises the nagging
question: were the animals better off under drunken Jones, the tyrant, than they are under one of their own? Whether you consider this novel a fairy story, a fable where animals and humans can communicate (zoomorphism) or a cautionary political essay disguised as fiction, ANIMAL FARM has earned an honored place in literary history. Its sobering view of the effects of dictatorship will expand and warn thoughtful minds. His style flows as easily as absolute power corrupts; the plot captivates readers and maintains our interest from the start. Beware the excess of human vice!
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Title: 1984 by George Orwell, Erich Fromm ISBN: 0451524934 Publisher: Signet Pub. Date: May, 1990 List Price(USD): $7.95 |
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Title: Lord of the Flies: A Novel by William Gerald Golding ISBN: 0399501487 Publisher: Perigee Pub. Date: July, 1959 List Price(USD): $6.95 |
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Title: To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee ISBN: 0446310786 Publisher: Little Brown & Company Pub. Date: 11 October, 1988 List Price(USD): $6.99 |
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Title: Catcher in the Rye Mass Market - Paperback by J.D. Salinger ISBN: 0316769487 Publisher: Little Brown & Company Pub. Date: 01 May, 1991 List Price(USD): $5.99 |
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Title: Brave New World by Aldous Huxley ISBN: 0060929871 Publisher: Perennial Pub. Date: 01 September, 1998 List Price(USD): $11.95 |
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