by Layla Link
Having read George Orwell’s 1984 previously at
the age of around thirteen, I decided it was worth a re-read, especially
considering that I am now studying the Russian Revolution.
It being one of the most
famous dystopian satires in the English language, I expected great things. And
great things I got!
The book tells the story of Winston Smith, a government
worker, and his lover, Julia as they explore the themes of freedom, doom and
control in a world of the all-powerful, all-watching Big Brother. To me, the
book has a slow start, and I felt tempted to give up after finding a somewhat
dull, descriptive and barely-there plot in the first few chapters.
However by
the middle, I was captivated by the stories of Winston and Julia and I too was
trapped in a world of Big Brother, being unable to put the book down. I was
intrigued the most however, by the book inside the book: while most
young readers (including myself at age thirteen) yearn to skip at least some of
the treatise by Emmanuel Goldstein, the Trotsky-esque dissident and public
enemy whose forbidden work comes into Winston's hands, I longed for it.
The
ideas and infinitely precise narrative of this “book” fascinated me, as I was now
able to make parallels between communism, specifically in Russia, and this new
dystopian world. Essentially, everyone should read this book at some point: it
is unconventionally gripping, endlessly fascinating and beautifully detailed.
So, if like me, you read this book at a young age, I recommend you to re-read
it and see where it takes you.
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