Keep the Aspidistra Flying
by George Orwellpublished
June 11th 1997
(first published 2004)
by Penguin Books Ltd
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binding
Paperback, 288 pages
isbn
014027085X
(isbn13: 9780140270853)
description
London, 1936. Gordon Comstock has declared war on the money god; and Gordon is losing the war. Nearly 30 and "rather moth-eaten already," a...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 832)
Read in July, 2008
Dear George Orwell,
It's not you, it's me. It had to happen, really, this bit of faultering in the crush I've had on you. Sure, I've known you for years, but as you know, I've been completely smitten with you since last summer when I read your first published novel, Down and Out in Paris and London. I grew more smitten while reading An Age Like This, 1920- 1940, your early correspondance, reviews, and essays, and I remained so while reading your 2nd published novel, Burmese Days....more
It's not you, it's me. It had to happen, really, this bit of faultering in the crush I've had on you. Sure, I've known you for years, but as you know, I've been completely smitten with you since last summer when I read your first published novel, Down and Out in Paris and London. I grew more smitten while reading An Age Like This, 1920- 1940, your early correspondance, reviews, and essays, and I remained so while reading your 2nd published novel, Burmese Days....more
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bookshelves:
british,
early-twentieth-century,
film,
modern-fiction,
psychological-drama
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
budding writers and closet socialists
I haven't yet read Orwell's Down and Out in Paris and London, a supposedly excellent autobiographical account of a middle-class man's descent into abject poverty, but I would imagine that some of the experiences Orwell describes in that book must have served him equally well in writing Keep the Aspidistra Flying, which must rank among the bleakest novels about self-induced poverty ever written in the English language.
Keep the Aspidistra Flying centres on Gordon Comstock...more
Keep the Aspidistra Flying centres on Gordon Comstock...more
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Read in June, 2008
I think 1984 has a certain amount in common with this book. While this may seem rash, 1984 being a dystopian epic and KEEP THE ASPIDISTRA FLYING being a realistic account of a young writer's lonely, harrassed existence in Depression-era London, a few things are obvious to me. Both this book and 1984 begin with a mention of the time. Here's the first line of KEEP THE ASPIDISTRA FLYING:
"The clock struck half-past two."
The first line of 1984 is:
"It was a bright cold day i...more
"The clock struck half-past two."
The first line of 1984 is:
"It was a bright cold day i...more
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favourites,
post-1900s
Read in February, 2008
I found Keep The Aspidistra Flying to be an extremely pessimistic and frustrating novel, yet beautifully written and a useful insight into the lower-middle classes of the 1930s. In comparison to Evelyn Waugh's A Handful of Dust which I had read previously, the contrast between the novels has portrayed two different views on certain social backgrounds, as well as some striking similarities. Both Waugh and Orwell focus on the theme of loss and struggles, and especially on the need for faith and be...more
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Read in September, 2008
Well first of all, Orwell is a fantastic prose writer. He can really make your feet feel tired by his descriptions of walking long distance in London, and the way he describes food, drinking, and the loose change in your pocket is right on the mark. What made me tired is the main character's total obsession about money. Not having money, the making of money, etc. I hated that and that is one of the main themes of this book. But then again I wanted to shoot the main character in the head an...more
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bookshelves:
fiction
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
starving artists, aspiring writers, the cynics.
contains SPOILER...
Gordon Comstock is an annoying man to be with. He's filled with self-loathing, self-doubt and though he likes to speak in an outraged tone, he's pretty much a doormat. He likes to describe himself as "thirty and moth-eaten". Gordon only has one friend, Ravelston (a self-titled socialist), editor of a magazine called Antichrist.
Gordon likes to beg his girlfriend for sex -- and got super pissed when she said no. Rosemary - that's the girl's name - seems to t...more
Gordon Comstock is an annoying man to be with. He's filled with self-loathing, self-doubt and though he likes to speak in an outraged tone, he's pretty much a doormat. He likes to describe himself as "thirty and moth-eaten". Gordon only has one friend, Ravelston (a self-titled socialist), editor of a magazine called Antichrist.
Gordon likes to beg his girlfriend for sex -- and got super pissed when she said no. Rosemary - that's the girl's name - seems to t...more
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Read in September, 2008
recommends it for:
book people, sarcastic pessimists
The plot of this book is kind of slow and doesn't really go anywhere, but it doesn't matter one bit because that is absolutely not the point. Orwell's prose is so skillful and so vivid that he could write copy for the LL Bean catalog and it would still make me cry. His description is sort of like a verbal impressionist work: he knows exactly what to point out to you in a scene and how such that you understand not only what you're supposed to be looking at but what it FEELS like to be looking a...more
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Smart little(supposedly semi-autobiographical) look by Orwell at the "money world", and what it means to live in it as an artist. Not up to the level of 1984 or Animal Farm (what is, though, really?), but still a highly enjoyable satire of both the indiginities of capitalism and the pretensions of the so-called starving artist.
Gordon Comstock is an aspiring poet who, upon noticing that he's almost 30 and nearly "moth-eaten" already, declares war on the "money-god&...more
Gordon Comstock is an aspiring poet who, upon noticing that he's almost 30 and nearly "moth-eaten" already, declares war on the "money-god&...more
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Read in January, 1990
recommends it for:
Anyone
Faith, hope and criticism.
My favourite novel of all time chronicles Gordon Comstock’s war against money and British society. That Gordon chose to live outside the system and stay true to his art tempers the optimism of most follow your dreams type aspirational story with Gordon sinking further and further into poverty much to the shame of his family. It was always my intention to buy an aspidistra and display it in the bay window on getting married in homage to this book. As it happened my...more
My favourite novel of all time chronicles Gordon Comstock’s war against money and British society. That Gordon chose to live outside the system and stay true to his art tempers the optimism of most follow your dreams type aspirational story with Gordon sinking further and further into poverty much to the shame of his family. It was always my intention to buy an aspidistra and display it in the bay window on getting married in homage to this book. As it happened my...more
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Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
fans of Notes from Underground and Nineteen Eighty Four
Very similar to Notes from Underground by Dostoevsky (whether or not intentional, references are made by the main c at his lowest ebb – "Under ground, under ground!..." – at the start of chapter 10). With my love of Dostoevsky, I can't help enjoying this book. It only parted with this similarity in its choice of imaginary antagonist (the "Money God") and the plot's unlikely conclusion.
I genuinely liked the main character, insomuch that I wanted to smack him every few ...more
I genuinely liked the main character, insomuch that I wanted to smack him every few ...more
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Orwell's catalogue is done a great disservice by the public school system that offers Animal Farm and 1984 as fictional evidence of the poverty of Soviet Communism. This ignores two important qualities in their author: he was a committed British Socialist, and he was a prolific novelist.
Keep the Aspidistra Flying is a novel of characters first and a social critique second. Orwell gives his poet-unhero a confessional inner dialogue that makes his 1984 counterpart feel like a campaign poster...more
Keep the Aspidistra Flying is a novel of characters first and a social critique second. Orwell gives his poet-unhero a confessional inner dialogue that makes his 1984 counterpart feel like a campaign poster...more
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Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
those needing a happiness reduction
Ok, I see the literary value of this book; however, I am frustrated with the 'intent.' When I read Morrison or hooks, although dense, I feel that each word chosen by the author has emotional weight. Words feel like they are chosen without emotion to increase the literary value...but they don't make me feel anything. Although, I do admit that I did feel an emotional attachment to Gordon (due to good writing and not emotional investment).
I also found the black and white nature of the plot f...more
I also found the black and white nature of the plot f...more
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Read in February, 2008
I still think Orwell is one of my favorite authors. I picked this book up on the shelf here at the Belmont Library because I was still waiting for Kerouac to come through inter-library loan.
The book was depressing to me because the main character (Gordon Comstock) is such a frustrating individual. And at times I could see myself in his actions. He declares his war on money from a young age and is so driven by this decision that he hurts himself and those closest to him. What he doesn't...more
The book was depressing to me because the main character (Gordon Comstock) is such a frustrating individual. And at times I could see myself in his actions. He declares his war on money from a young age and is so driven by this decision that he hurts himself and those closest to him. What he doesn't...more
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Thank you Tosh (and Donald and Martine). Until you jogged my memory with your review I had completely forgotten this terrific novel. I still have my dogearred copy on a shelf somewhere. Now I'm off to hunt it up and re-read a REAL book to get the sugary taste of The Gurnsey Literary and Potato Pie Society out of my mouth.
Gordon Comstock is a poor young man who works in a grubby London bookstore and spends his evenings shivering in a rented room, trying to write. He is determined t...more
Gordon Comstock is a poor young man who works in a grubby London bookstore and spends his evenings shivering in a rented room, trying to write. He is determined t...more
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satire,
social-crit
I really loved this book.
You know how when the writer decides to put you through a fairly unsympathetic character and you find that he shares some of your own traits and such....only to be kind of depressed and oddly fascinated by the experience?
This is one of the unknown Orwell books, and for that reason it should be read by everyone who's gotten into the bigger hits and really gotten into them.
The whole point is that it's not being 'artistic' to decide to mope around and hate eve...more
Read in April, 2008
I really loved this book.
You know how when the writer decides to put you through a fairly unsympathetic character and you find that he shares some of your own traits and such....only to be kind of depressed and oddly fascinated by the experience?
This is one of the unknown Orwell books, and for that reason it should be read by everyone who's gotten into the bigger hits and really gotten into them.
The whole point is that it's not being 'artistic' to decide to mope around and hate eve...more
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Read in May, 2001
recommends it for:
Fresh college graduates, anyone working in an entry-level media position in New York City
I think it was brave of Orwell to make Gordon Comstock so annoying. You want to take him by the shoulders and shake some sense into him half the time.
You've got a zillion books dealing with famine and being dirt-poor on the farm, but there aren't so many that deal with the sort of respectable poverty where you're educated and culturally "middle-class" in some ways but in terms of disposable income you might as well be the worst kind of working class. Orwell deals with the shame an...more
You've got a zillion books dealing with famine and being dirt-poor on the farm, but there aren't so many that deal with the sort of respectable poverty where you're educated and culturally "middle-class" in some ways but in terms of disposable income you might as well be the worst kind of working class. Orwell deals with the shame an...more
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Read in January, 1999
Another of my very favourite books ever- and probably the only book I ever read in middle or high school that I enjoyed. We read it as a counterpoint to Virginia Woolf's essay 'A Room of One's Own' which made for interesting discussions. Like much of Orwell's work, the focus is on poverty and artistic individualism, and there's a strong thread of biting satire relating to the so-called parlor socialism, the advertising field, and middle class values. A lot of the commentary holds up today, an...more
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By far my least favorite Orwell novel. The Gordon character is so frustrating as he mopes around feeling sorry for himself. You just want to grab him, slap his face, and yell "Get a grip, man!". Then, just as you sense the denouement, Orwell rushes through without establishing this monumental change and Gordon just gives up on all of his dreams at once. This novel is so black and white as to make it horribly boring and tedious to get through. I think I was quite generous to even give i
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Read in February, 2004
recommends it for:
Richard E. Grant fans
My favorite Orwell, screw the farm book. A pretentious ad writer chucks it in to write the great British prose collection, settling for a tiny flat in the craggiest village in England. A very funny satire on artistic integrity and the decision not "to sell out". Filmed 10 years ago as "A Merry War" starring Richard E. Grant and Helena Bonham-Carter.
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Read in July, 2007
Gordon Comstock would certainly rank in the top five of "Characters you love to hate and hate to love" list.
Not as polished as '1984' or 'Animal Farm' and thankfully so, this one's a great read simply because of its rawness.
Orwell takes a satirical take on the role money plays in our lives and how hard it is to escape its influence.
"Somebody or other had said that the modern world is only habitable by saints and scoundrels."
Not as polished as '1984' or 'Animal Farm' and thankfully so, this one's a great read simply because of its rawness.
Orwell takes a satirical take on the role money plays in our lives and how hard it is to escape its influence.
"Somebody or other had said that the modern world is only habitable by saints and scoundrels."
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