Nineteen Eighty-Four, by George Orwell

Omphalos

Orthodox Herbertarian
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If you ask me (and for the record, nobody ever does, even if I prompt them with a question like that) there is a little bit of overlap among the lists of best SF books ever written, and the best novels ever written, probably by five or six books. I'm sure that a few out there will find that a shocking idea, hopefully not everyone, but I really believe that a few novels - nothing written recently, mind you, except maybe for The Road - managed to achieve something stellar, something worthy of serious praise outside of SF circles. I will be the first one to admit that I occasionally sing the praises of some SF that other people find abhorrent. Consider my fetish for zombie literature as a case in point. But I have been reading and writing about SF for long enough now that I think I am capable of differentiating the stinkers and the nuggets of gold either by using good old fashioned community standards, or with a critical method. Unfortunately there is one factor that makes my job of spreading the Word about these novels as tough as neutronium nails: Many of them, as you soon shall see, were not marketed as SF to begin with, and since "SF" is not only a sub-genre of literature, but also a marketing category, I have sometimes had a hard time getting others to accept obvious SF novels as SF for the mere fact that they were distributed through the mainstream system. This week's selection happens to be a book that is in fact generally acknowledged as a masterpiece of twentieth century literature. It is so obvious to me that it is SF also that I personally cannot fathom the reaction I get from some quarters when I mention that fact, but nevertheless, get that reaction I do. The book is George Orwell's magnificent tale of repression, love, sex and torture, Nineteen Eighty-Four, published in 1949. I'm sure that most of you read this book in high school, including even that one user from Myanmar who turns up at the book review site from time to time so I will not waste too much time getting into the nitty-gritty. Instead Ill just give the basics of the plot, discuss the efficacy of Orwell's world-building and characterization, then wrap up with some comments on the work as a whole...Please click here, or on the book cover above, to be taken to the complete review..
 
Anybody else catch the recent blurb in the news about 1984 being sold in the US via the Amazon Kindle device and then when publisher decided to stop selling digital versions of the book in the US that.... Amazon remotely deleted all copies of the digital book from their customers devices! :eek:

Sure, on one hand it is kind of like the digital version of a product recall but on the other hand it is tinged with irony that Big Brother has full control over the purchases you have made.
 
Yup, the irony was just dripping off of that one... :smiley:

But as an author, I could definitely sympathize with the true owners of Orwell's literary estate. I think Amazon went about it completely the wrong way (definitely should have sent out a notice to customers), but if some yahoo started distributing my work for their own profit without the legal right to do so, I'd definitely want the seller (in this case, Amazon) to do everything in their power to stop it immediately. And with the Kindle, apparently they even have the right to retroactively reverse the mistake, and refund customer's money at the same time.
 
I tried to read this again, but only got about 2/3rds the way through? The bit where he is reading his girlfriend The Book. I have to finish it sometime. Before I die hopefully.
 
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