Editors Reads
Literary FictionDystopian FictionClassic LiteraturePolitical Fiction

George Orwell

British · b. 1903

4 books reviewed Avg rating 4.5 / 5Top rating 4.7 / 5

George Orwell was a British novelist and essayist whose dystopian novels 1984 and Animal Farm remain among the most widely read and politically influential books of the 20th century.

George Orwell’s two most enduring works — Animal Farm and 1984 — were written in the final decade of his life, and both drew directly on his experience of totalitarianism and his disillusionment with ideological movements that betrayed the values they claimed to represent. Animal Farm, published in 1945, is a brilliantly compressed allegory of the Soviet revolution: a fable in which farm animals overthrow their human master and establish an egalitarian society that is steadily corrupted by the pigs until the original principles are entirely reversed. The novel is short, clear, and devastating — one of the most effective political parables ever written.

1984, published in 1949, is darker and more sustained. Set in a totalitarian state that controls not just behaviour but language and thought, the novel follows Winston Smith’s futile attempt to maintain interiority against a system designed to eliminate it. Orwell’s inventions — doublethink, Newspeak, the memory hole, Room 101 — have entered the language as shorthand for the mechanisms of authoritarian control, and the novel’s portrait of how power maintains itself through perpetual war and the destruction of history remains alarmingly relevant.

Both books have been embraced by readers across the political spectrum, sometimes in ways Orwell would have found troubling — his own politics were explicitly democratic socialist, not libertarian or conservative. The quality of 1984’s prose becomes occasionally didactic in its final third, where Orwell includes lengthy excerpts from an imaginary revolutionary text. But as a political warning, it has lost none of its force.

4 Books Reviewed

1984 book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

1984

by George Orwell

4.7

In the totalitarian super-state of Oceania, Winston Smith works for the Ministry of Truth, rewriting history to serve The Party. His secret rebellion — and its consequences — is one of the most important political novels ever written.

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Animal Farm book cover
Bestseller

Animal Farm

by George Orwell

4.6

The animals of Manor Farm overthrow their human farmer, establish a democracy, and watch helplessly as the pigs gradually become indistinguishable from the humans they replaced.

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Homage to Catalonia book cover
Editor's Pick

Homage to Catalonia

by George Orwell

4.5

George Orwell's first-person account of fighting for the POUM militia in the Spanish Civil War — the trenches outside Huesca, the revolutionary Barcelona of 1936, the May Days street fighting, the Stalinist suppression of the independent left, and his narrow escape from arrest and execution.

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Down and Out in Paris and London book cover
4.2

George Orwell's first book: a memoir of destitution — months spent penniless in Paris, working as a plongeur in restaurant kitchens, and then weeks tramping between workhouses in England — written with the observational precision that would define everything that followed.

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Reading Guides & Lists

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George Orwell Books in Order: Complete Bibliography & Best Starting Points

George Orwell wrote six novels and a body of non-fiction that shaped the political language of the twentieth century. This guide covers his complete bibliography, the best books to start with, and how to read his work in context.

guide

Where to Start with George Orwell: A Reading Guide

Where to start with George Orwell — whether to begin with 1984, Animal Farm, Homage to Catalonia, or Down and Out in Paris and London. A complete reading guide.

guide

The Handmaid's Tale vs 1984: Which Dystopia to Read First?

The Handmaid's Tale and 1984 are the two most studied dystopian novels. Here's how they differ, what each does best, and which to read first — plus what to read after both.

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1984 vs Brave New World: Which Classic Dystopia Should You Read First?

Two novels, two visions of how the world ends — not with a bang but with a boot or a soma tablet. Here is how to read them, in what order, and why both still matter.

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Books Like Animal Farm: Political Allegory, Power, and How Revolutions Eat Themselves

Orwell's barnyard coup — All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others — is the most devastating political fable ever written, 112 pages that explain the entire history of authoritarian revolution. These books share its dark clarity.

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Books Like 1984: 10 Dystopian Novels That Will Shake You to the Core

If Orwell's vision of totalitarianism and surveillance left you unsettled, these dystopian and political novels hit the same nerve.

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