On Nineteen eighty-four A biography

D. J. Taylor, 1960-

Book - 2019

"Since its publication nearly 70 years ago, George Orwell's 1984 has been regarded as one of the most influential novels of the modern age. Politicians have testified to its influence on their intellectual identities, rock musicians have made records about it, TV viewers watch a reality show named for it, and a White House spokesperson tells of 'alternative facts.' The world we live in is often described as an Orwellian one, awash in inescapable surveillance and invasions of privacy. On 1984 dives deep into Orwell's life to chart his earlier writings and key moments in his youth, such as his years at a boarding school, whose strict and charismatic headmaster shaped the idea of Big Brother. Taylor tells the story of ...the writing of the book, taking readers to the Scottish island of Jura, where Orwell, newly famous thanks to Animal Farm but coping with personal tragedy and rapidly declining health, struggled to finish 1984. Published during the cold war -- a term Orwell coined -- Taylor elucidates the environmental influences on the book. Then he examines 1984's post-publication life, including its role as a tool to understand our language, politics, and government. In a current climate where truth, surveillance, censorship, and critical thinking are contentious, Orwell's work is necessary" --

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Abrams Press, an imprint of ABRAMS 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
D. J. Taylor, 1960- (author)
Physical Description
194 pages : illustration ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 173-179) and index.
ISBN
9781419738005
  • Before (1903-1943). The terrors of power ; Life into art ; Influence and inspiration
  • During (1943-1949). Fits and starts ; Jura days ; The last man in Europe
  • After (1949 ad infinitum). Cold War warriors ; Nearing the sell-by date ; The post-truth world
  • Appendix: The manuscript of Nineteen eighty-four.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Taylor (Orwell: A Life) delivers a second George Orwell "biography," in this case tracing the "life" of the author's most famous novel, 1984. In discussing the book's genesis, Taylor suggests that Orwell's public school experiences, as related in his essay "Such, Such Were the Joys," gave him an early taste of repressive regimes. Orwell himself pointed to the 1943 Tehran Conference--in which Churchill, Stalin, and Roosevelt met to "carve up" the post-WWII world--as providing initial inspiration for his dystopian future. Most compelling is Taylor's account of Orwell's unusual (for him) struggle to complete the novel, while wracked by tuberculosis and holed up in a remote village in the Inner Hebrides. Taylor vividly evokes the image of a tubercular Orwell hunched in bed, laboriously typing out a fair copy of the manuscript for his publisher, while the Atlantic rages outside his window. Less thorough on the book's post-publication life, Taylor does convey the trouble to which Orwell went, mostly fruitlessly, to prevent the book's political misappropriation by both left and right. Unfortunately, 1984's influence far exceeds the capacity this slender volume can capture, but Taylor has nevertheless crafted a gripping portrait of the creation of an essential novel. (Oct.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The life and times of a "glittering futurist extravaganza."Biographer and novelist Taylor (Rock and Roll Is Life, 2018, etc.) describes George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four as "an expos of the totalitarian mind," perhaps the "first Cold War novel," and "one of the key texts necessary for an understanding of the twenty-first century." High praise for a book Orwell (1903-1950) laconically described to his publisher in 1947 as a "fantasy, but in the form of a naturalistic novel." Taylor's 2003 biography of Orwell won the Whitbread Book Award for Biography. Here, he zeroes in on Orwell's final book. He delves deeply and brightly into the making of the novel, its inspiration, how Orwell wrote it, and how it was received critically, socially, and politically then and afterward. It took Orwell five years to write. He was quite ill and in hibernation on the rugged Isle of Jura, off Scotland's coast, and died less than a year after it was published in 1949. "By writing about the terrors that obsessed him," writes Taylor, "he had got them out of his system." The novel is a "devastating analysis of the corruption of language," a "dystopian horror worldand more." Taylor also deftly shows how "many of its incidental fragments turn out to have been robbed wholesale from the life that ran along beside it." He demonstrates how Orwell generated the narrative while also continuing to contribute to magazines, exploring the political and social landscape. The 1943 Allied leaders' Tehran Conference gave "his consciousness a decisive kick, and he was able to clarify his vision for Nineteen Eighty-Four after he read Yevgeny Zamyatin's We. Before Orwell died, he believed "something resembling [the fascist society depicted in Nineteen Eighty-Four] could arrive." Taylor provides a good introduction to the work, but for more detail on the novel's impact on popular culture, look to Dorian Lynskey's The Ministry of Truth.A lively, engaging, concise biography of a novel. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.