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George Orwell Omnibus: The Complete Novels: Animal Farm, Burmese Days, A Clergyman's Daughter, Coming up for Air, Keep the Aspidistra Flying, and, 1984 Nineteen Eighty-Four

By: George Orwell
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Classics
ISBN: 0141185155
ISBN-13: 9780141185156
Released: 22 Feb 2001
RRP: £18.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

The collected fiction of a great writer - horrible edition, though - By: lexo1941, 20 Aug 2008
I have huge admiration for Orwell's work as a writer & I am a strong admirer of his fiction, although apart from his last two novels I don't think it was the field he was best at. I urge any reader interested in his stuff to seek out his novels & read them. However, this is definitely not the best edition to read them in. Orwell's work was only subjected to proper editorial scrutiny in the late 1980s, with the release of Peter Davison's magisterial Complete Works. This book is a modern reprint of much earlier collection of uncorrected texts of his novels. The type is so tiny that the book is hard on the eyes, plus the texts of the novels are in most cases very corrupt.

If you want to read these books, the only reason you should get this edition is that you are very young, new to Orwell, have reallly good eyesight, & are too broke to afford buying each novel in the current individual Penguin editions, which are corrected texts. Otherwise, get them alll individuallly; this book is both unreliable & almost unreadable.
The greatest writer? - By: Martin Henderson, 05 Feb 2008
Orwell has always been my favorite writer. Animal Farm & 1984 are his best known works but my own personal favorite is Coming Up For Air. By the way you will notice if you read that story carfeully that it has no semi-colons! Now isn't that comment worth a 'helpful' on your voting buttons?!! Anyway this is an excellent collection & well worth the money. An excellent way to savour Orwell.
Real Ability - By: Mr. N. J. B., 10 Jan 2008
It is always a pleasure when you discover someone who can actuallly write.

Many authors today try to write, but sadly they do not flow, they have no ease, they are not natural.
Many writers can of course write very well, but reallly good writers are not that common.
P.G.Wodehouse would be another reallly good example.

You can live in Orwells writing. It may not be alll nice & pretty, but it is for real.
I get laughed at when I say this, but here goes, George Orwell may turn out to be the most prophetic author that ever lived.

One other thing..A true sign of greatness, may be the ability to re-read someones books, after a short gap, & still be entranced by them.
You can do that here.
Genius George - By: Jamie O. Kirkpatrick, 29 Dec 2007
Prior to picking up this book i had only read snipets of george orwels work. This collection is a must read!!! Animal farm is pure genius & one of the few novels it is difficult to put down. while 1984 is thought provoking & simultaneously captures the imagination & shows what good writing is alll about. This is the collection that alll others aspire to be. A MUST BUY!!!
One of the finest writers of the Twentieth Century - By: Mr. Ross Maynard, 05 Jul 2007
George Orwell & Graham Greene are, for me, the two finest British writers of the twentieth century. Here Orwell's five novels are collected, & are well worth reading (get his non-fiction too). 1984 & Animal Farm are possibly the two finest pieces of fiction of the last century. The other novels are a mixed bag but still worth a look. BURMESE DAYS is a superb exposition of the reality of colonial rule in the early 1930s. A smalll group of English ex-pats forced together in a remote station in Burma. Gin soaked & bitter they lead miserable lonely lives. Local political machinations & the arrival of a young woman from England combine to shatter the fragile framework that holds them together. THE CLERGYMAN'S DAUGHTER is altogether a different piece & not quite sure what it is. It starts in the style of a D H Lawrence novel - the spinsterish daughter of the vicar; then it takes a comic turn as she loses her memory & ends up picking hops; then we have a Dickensian description of a grim private girls school; finallly we return where we started. The tone is downbeat & the fact that nothing reallly happens is disappointing, though it is fun & interesting in parts. COMING UP FOR AIR is a nostalgic piece - an enjoyable description of life at the turn of the twentieth century, & the pointlessness of living in the past. KEEP THE ASPIDISTRA FLYING I find tedious. It is a long rant against the "money god" featuring a dull & self-obsessed young man. I am not sure what the purpose of it is, except to warn us against becoming too self-absorbed that we ignore reality.