Publisher: Penguin
Format: Kindle
Published: This Edition: 3rd July 2008
First Published: 1949
Number of Pages: 336
Book: Bought
Genre: Dystopia, Science-Fiction, Thriller, Suspense, Horror, Psychological Suspense, Classic Adult, YA-Adult Crossover
Recommended
Age: 13+
Contains: Violence, Torture, Alcohol and Smoking References
No Drug References
“It was a bright cold day in April, and
the clocks were striking thirteen.”
Winston
Smith works for the Ministry of Truth in London, chief city of Airstrip
One. Big Brother stares out from every
poster, the Thought Police uncover every act of betrayal. When Winston finds love with Julia, he
discovers that life does not have to be dull and deadening, and awakens to new
possibilities. Despite the police
helicopters that hover and circle overhead, Winston and Julia begin to question
the Party; they are drawn towards conspiracy.
Yet Big Brother will not tolerate dissent – even in the mind. For those with original thoughts they
invented Room 101…
Nineteen
Eighty-Four is George Orwell’s terrifying
vision of a totalitarian future in which everything and everyone is slave to a
tyrannical regime.
Review:
Imagine a world where everything is
controlled. And I'm not just talking the Nazi or Soviet kind of control.
I'm talking control of EVERYTHING. Media,
books, language, actions, thoughts, history –
what people know and feel. It's terrifying because it’s happened before
to some extent. It could happen again... And I guess it would start
small and get bigger and bigger until... Bam. Hello, Big Brother...
Now don't forget:
"Big
Brother Is Watching You..."
All the time. Everywhere. No
matter why you are doing.
This is the world Winston Smith lives in.
This totalitarian state where every single thing is monitored and
recorded - even thoughts. Where history and memories can be rewritten to
fit with the ideals of the Ingsoc - the English Socialism Party.
Free thinking is not acceptable – not ever.
It is the worst crime you can commit.
And yet this is what Winston is doing –
thinking his own thoughts. And then he falls in love with Julia.
Even with spies everywhere, they find
themselves drawn towards rebellion, towards conspiracy.
Bu nothing gets past Big Brother.
Can Winston hold onto his love and
freethinking through the tortures the Ministry of Love inflict on him?
Through Room 101, where your worst
nightmares come to life...?
“WAR
IS PEACE
'FREEDOM
IS SLAVERY
'IGNORANCE
IS STRENGTH.”
When I was younger, adults would say things
like: "oh, it's like Big Brother is watching you" or
"well, that would be
in my Room 101..." As a child, I didn't get it. It wasn't
until the start of my AS Level English Lit that I finally understood it all.
Sure, I'd heard of 1984,
but I didn't realise that it was the book about Big Brother. So when my
English teacher recommended reading it as an additional text, I was instantly
intrigued. 1984 is seen as
a literary classic and after reading it, I most certainly know why. It's
mind-blowingly amazing and so very scary it's untrue. I can't recommend
it enough!
Now, dystopias are always scary. There's always
the whole 'what if?' side of them,
the feeling of foreboding you can't quite shake. 1984 is literally the king of all dystopias.
It is scary as hell, probably because every single thing about it felt
really like it could all happen tomorrow. Like a Big Brother is just
round the corner. Or is here already, for all we know… Orwell has
captured everything everyone fears most and turns it into a scary-as-hell story
and world that is so real you could almost touch it, taste it, feel it.
And I know characters aren't the big point
of this book – being scared out of your mind might be, though – but I did
really like Winston: he was a refreshing change in a world that pretty much
lacked morals and free thinking. But what this book shows perfectly is
that even the strongest character, even the ones with hatred and love and resolve
inside, must struggle with everything they have to resist or fight back against
the psychological control of a totalitarian dystopian world – and that not all
will be successful…
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On a negative note, we know Winston
can remember all the past – the bits before they were written from history and
the people who disappeared, but I wasn't sure about everyone else - did they
just know it all and keep quiet out of fear? Or did it all somehow get
written out of their heads as the papers were rewritten? And if so, how?
Damn these questions – they bugged me for ages. Still bug me, actually...
But Orwell's writing was obviously amazing.
The writing was beautiful and haunting, if a little heavy at times.
Nonetheless, I could see everything so, so clearly in my head. And
the plot was so very gripping its untrue. It was intense, suspenseful –
the kind of plot where you could feel all that suspense building and building
and building, waiting for the other shoe to drop, so to speak. It was
intense and terrifying. And oh so addictive.
Some books are called classics even when
they don't seem like them. 1984
was most definitely worthy of the title. It was psychologically
terrifying, mentally challenging, totally and completely beyond words. 1984 was an amazing, powerful book that
left me shaken up and reeling. Classics are classics for a reason, my
teacher told me when I mentioned how brilliant it was. And in the case of
1984, it's a classic for a million and more reasons. It is
most definitely a book everyone must read, a book I can't recommend
enough.
Star Rating:
4¼ Out of 5
Read this
book if you liked:
The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
Modern Utopia by H.G. Wells
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Challenges
It's Taking Part In:
Happy Reading
Megan