Animal Farm

Paperback, 141 pages

Italian language

Published July 3, 2008 by Arnoldo Mondadori.

ISBN:
978-0-14-103613-7
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Goodreads:
3149348

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(2 reviews)

Mr. Jones of Manor Farm is so lazy and drunken that one day he forgets to feed his livestock. The ensuing rebellion under the leadership of the pigs Napoleon and Snowball leads to the animals taking over the farm. Vowing to eliminate the terrible inequities of the farmyard, the renamed Animal Farm is organized to benefit all who walk on four legs. But as time passes, the ideals of the rebellion are corrupted, then forgotten. And something new and unexpected emerges...

172 editions

Boy! Orwell really doesn't like Stalin.

As a piece of writing, it's engaging, easy to read, and well crafted. This is no surprise, as Orwell's a great writer that—though he lacks subtlety—is able to deliver his thoughts well without the reader feeling written down to.

I see a lot of reviews state that this book is "prescient"—much like they say about another of his: 1984—but this isn't in the way people think. Though Orwell died in the '50s, Animal Farm is less-prescient about our sudden turn to authoritarianism, and more prescient towards the fall of the Soviet Union. While Orwell intended Napoleon to be a caricature of Stalin, what we get instead is a composite image of all the leaders of the Soviet Union to some degree or another. I imagine the Napoleon of the last chapter to be more Yeltsin than Stalin, though there's no way Orwell could've known that.

This ties into my critiques …