1984: Big Brother Is Watching You (Audio Book)

Author: George OrwellRead By: Simon Prebble
Save
40%
See more in Classics
Share this Product

This product is eligible for Free Shipping on orders over $10. Click for details. Eligible for FREE SHIPPING
*Some restrictions apply. Click here for details.
List Price:  See Details$29.95
You Save: (40%) $12.11
Our Price: $17.84
Shipping $3.60

Buy.com Total Price: $21.44
Qty   
In Stock: Usually Ships in 1 to 2 business days.
Format: Audio Book
Also Available: Paperback $6.52 Hardcover $18.16 Audio Book $19.12 Paperback $17.38 Paperback $7.60 Paperback $5.99
Permalink
Bill Me Later
Bill Me Later
No Payments for up to 90 Days
on Orders over $149
Plus New Bill Me Later Customers receive $25 off $149
Subject to credit approval. Details
Bill Me Later
Bill Me Later
Marketplace Buying Choices
Supermart
Price: $17.30
+ $3.99 shipping
In Stock
iDiscountBooks
Price: $17.48
+ $3.99 shipping
In Stock
See all 4 New & Used from $17.30 + $3.99 shipping
What's this?
Product Summary
Format: Audio Book
ISBN: 9781433202469
Publisher: Blackstone Audiobooks
Publish Date: 9/1/2007
Buy.com Sku: 205076109
Item#:
Dimensions (in Inches) 5.75H x 5.5L x 1T
 
George Orwells prophetic, nightmarish vision of "Negative Utopia" is timelierthan ever--and its warnings more powerful. Unabridged. 9 CDs.
 
Annotation:
George Orwell's celebrated 1948 vision of a world subsumed in tyranny and war describes the process of events by which Winston Smith, a London clerk at the Ministry of Truth, comes to understand the true nature and aims of the government he works for, and portrays his doomed attempt to create a private life for himself and his lover, Julia. One of the bleakest political novels ever written, 1984 illustrates Orwell's despair that democracy could ever summon the strength to overcome totalitarianism in his lifetime.

 

Praise
New Statesman
"A book that goes through the reader like an east wind, cracking the skin, opening the sores; hope has died in Mr. Orwell's wintry mind, and only pain is known. I do not think I have ever read a novel more frightening and depressing; and yet, such are the originality, the suspense, the speed of writing and withering indignation that it is impossible to put the book down. The faults of Orwell as a writer--monotony, nagging, the lonely schoolboy shambling down the one dispiriting track--are transformed now he rises to a large subject." - V. S. Pritchett 06/18/1949

New York Times Book Review
"[I]t is probable that no other work of this generation has made us desire freedom more earnestly or loathe tyranny with such fulness....It is in the intimate history, of course, that he reveals his stature as a novelist, for it is here that the moral and the psychological values with which he is concerned are brought out of the realm of political prophecy into that of personalized drama....'Nineteen Eighty-Four', the most contemporary novel of this year and who knows of how many past and to come, is a great examination into and dramatization of Lord Acton's famous apothegm, 'Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely.'" - Mark Schorer 06/12/1949

New Yorker
"'Nineteen Eighty-Four' confirms its author in the special, honorable place he holds in our intellectual life....[I]t is a profound, terrifying, and wholly fascinating book....Orwell's theory of power is developed brilliantly, at considerable length. And the social system that it postulates is described with magnificent circumstantiality." - Lionel Trilling 06/18/1949


 
Author Bio
George Orwell
Son of an English administrator stationed in India (in the "Opium Department"), Orwell (born Eric Blair) returned to Henley-on-Thames in England with his mother when he was 2. He eventually attended Eton, becoming a somewhat rebellious boy who questioned his family's middle-class values. From 1921 to 1927, he served with the Indian Imperial Police in Burma, a job he loathed, and after he resigned he devoted himself to learning to write, first in England, then in Paris, where he began to publish articles on social issues under the pen name of George Orwell. All his life, Orwell was aware of and outraged by poverty and unemployment and the inequities of the oppressive English class system. Impoverished himself, he worked in the kitchen of a Paris hotel, out of which came his memoir, DOWN AND OUT IN PARIS AND LONDON. He wrote several novels during this period--the first to be published was A CLERGYMAN'S DAUGHTER in 1935--as well as his classic study of Yorkshire coal miners, THE ROAD TO WIGAN PIER (1937). (Later in life, Orwell commented, "Every line of serious work that I have written since 1936 has been written, directly or indirectly, against totalitarianism and for democratic Socialism...") Orwell fought with the antifascists in the Spanish Civil War, detailing his experiences in HOMAGE TO CATALONIA (1938), and during World War II he wrote for the BBC. He is credited with coining the expression "cold war." Orwell's scathing political satire, ANIMAL FARM, was published after the war, in 1945. His first wife also died that year, and he and his son moved to the island of Jura off the Scottish coast, where Orwell wrote his most famous and influential novel, 1984, which was published in 1949. He remarried shortly after, but in 1950 he died of the tuberculosis that had long plagued him.

  
Product Image


Suggestion Box
Every voice counts, so stand up and be heard! Your opinion is important to us. If you have spotted a typo, discovered an incorrect price, or encountered a technical issue on this page, we want to hear about it. Thanks again for your feedback, and happy shopping! Please note: we are unable to reply directly to suggestions.
For additional information, click here to visit our Help Center.
Quick Help My Account What are you looking for? Country
 Wait There's More!
Check out these top-selling DVDs from todays hottest tv shows, movies and more!
G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra  This product is eligible for Free Shipping. Click for details.  Our Price: $19.99  You Save: $11.00    more info
The Taking of Pelham 123  This product is eligible for Free Shipping. Click for details.  Our Price: $19.99  You Save: $8.97    more info
Up This product is eligible for Free Shipping. Click for details.  Our Price: $19.99  You Save: $10.00    more info
Star Trek   Our Price: $19.99  You Save: $11.00    more info
Angels & Demons   Our Price: $19.99  You Save: $8.97    more info
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian  Our Price: $19.99  You Save: $9.99    more info
Terminator Salvation  Our Price: $18.99  You Save: $9.99    more info
Harry Potter & the Half-Blood Prince  Our Price: $19.99  You Save: $8.99    more info