Burmese Days

by George Orwell
Burmese Days
book data
892 ratings, 3.79 average rating, 100 reviews (more data...)
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published
2004 (first published 1934) by 1st World Library

binding
Paperback, 376 pages

isbn
1595404309   (isbn13: 9781595404305)

description
Imagine crossing E.M. Forster with Jane Austen. Stir in a bit of socialist doctrine, a sprig of satire, strong Indian curry, and a couple quarts of g...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1242)



Ginnie
07/04/08

bookshelves: literature
Read in January, 2006
I am embarrassed to admit that I had never even opened this book until I read Finding George Orwell in Burma by Emma Larkin, a journalist writing under a pseudonym. She traveled the police state of Myanmar (Burma) keeping a secret diary in the company of George Orwell via his book Burmese Days.

It is a pity that all the attention on Orwell is always on Animal Farm and ...more
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Ann
06/18/08

Read in June, 2008
I'd like to offer, as a sort of disclaimer, that it's a little weird for me to say whether or not I "like" a book, or worse still, to be the judge of how "good" it is. As a dutifully relativist English major, I'm wary of these terms, and especially of a star scale. I fall into all sorts of relativist angst over what "good" really is, who can say a book is "good," what these stars signify, and who am I to pick a number of stars...

That said (and I supp...more
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Li-Anne
Read in June, 2007
My god. Orwell is a comedian! Who knew? Aspects that are funny in a dark dark dark way. Loved it! Flory is hilarious - Imagine meeting the love of your life while trying to save her from a raging buffalo and then giving her a tiger skin that ends up reeking her house to high heavens. I mean talk about creating a fool. It's brilliant. And don't forget the birthmark on his face that seems to have a life of its own, choosing to embarrass him each time he gets close to kissing her. Of course there's...more
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Naeem
08/05/07

Orwell is a central figure in Nandy's Intimate Enemy. His "Shooting an Elephant" demonstrates Orwell's ambivalence towards colonialism. But Burmese days struck me as very pointed. I was so pleased for Orwell.

By the way, Orwell's essay, "Politics and the English Language," is the best thing I have ever read diagnosing unclear language use. In a nutshell here is the message: "Clarity has to be risked." Or conversely, when we are not being clear, this is bec...more
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Nicholas
Read in June, 2007
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Vik
09/02/08

bookshelves: reviewed
Read in January, 2007
Whilst reading this you should keep in mind that George Orwell had just returned from a stint in India. All other fiction and non-fiction I've read about the sunset of the British Empire tell similar accounts.

It's for this reason that this is called a semi-autobiographical account and you can imagine this book was pretty close to the real deal. Other reviewers have dismissed this as a not realistic account of the British Empire, on the contrary, I think this is a true account.

With all this ...more
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Patricia
Read in June, 2008
In George Orwell's essay "Why I Write," he says that his first published work of fiction, Burmese Days (1934), is the kind of book that he aspired to write at the age of sixteen when a passage from Milton's Paradise Lost sent "shivers down [his:] backbone." Specifically, Orwell says that he wanted to write "enormous naturalistic novels with unhappy endings, full of detailed descriptions and arresting similes, and also full of purple passages in which words were used part...more
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Liz
06/24/08

Read in June, 2008
recommends it for: do you like birthmarks, whores, and imperialism?
my favorite quotes:

'Of course I don't deny,' Flory said, 'that we modernise this country in certain ways. We can't help doing so. In fact, before we've finished we'll have wrecked the whole Burmese national culture. But we're not civilising them, we're only rubbing our dirt onto them. Where's it going to lead, this uprush of modern progress, as you call it? Just to our own dear old swinery of gramophones and billycock hats. Sometimes I think that in two hundred years all this --' he waved a ...more
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Indra
09/16/07

bookshelves: orwell
Panas terik, keringat tanpa henti dan depresi, demikian kesanku ketika membaca buku ini. Mungkin saja demikian, karena aku memang sedang sakit kuning kala itu, tapi di pihak lain Orwell memang dituduh sebagai seorang misantrop.

Kali ini Orwell benar-benar tidak memberikan kasihan bagi pembacanya. Penuh dengan deskripsi mendalam tentang panasnya Burma, suasana 'sumuk' menyesakkan, kebobrokan British Raj, juga tokoh-tokoh yang tidak satupun layak dijadikan idola.

Orwell dengan mantap mence...more
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Jennifer (JC-S)
Read in April, 2007
This is Orwell's first novel (published in 1934). Its satirical stereotypes make for potentially uncomfortable reading in today's politically correct world and yet to concentrate on this aspect is to miss both the point of the novel and Orwell's brilliant prose.

The setting of 'Burmese Days' (1926 in Burma) is in the period when the influence of the British Empire is waning in Asia but is not yet moribund. It is a period where codes of conduct, of 'proper' behaviour (or, at least the boundar...more
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Roger Cottrell
10/22/08

George Orwell once derided Graham Greene for writing novels set in Africa that had hardly any black characters at all. In this, Greene revealed his debt to Conrad (whom he self consciously mimicked without the anti-Imperialist critique. But in Burmese Days, Orwell revisits Conrad's theme of deriding colonialism primarily because it brings out the worst in Europeans - rather than for its impact on the colonised. OK, so i've been reading Edward Said and this was Orwell's first novel, written BE...more
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sara
03/09/08

Read in February, 2008
recommended to sara by: my son's India books collection
recommends it for: expats, orwell fans, Indian history buffs
Perfect to read this back in Mexico, where I often feel like the white oppressor. Reminded me of White Mischief, though unlike the dilettante expats and second sons and wealthy family embarassments sent to Africa, these are the disspated managers of remote stations in Burma that sent timber and other resources back to the British empire. Takes place in 1932, but oh how contemporary it felt! Brits never hold back with scathing characterization, and James Flory as the protaganist is a tortured sou...more
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Joel
Joel rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
06/22/07

bookshelves: alltimegreatest
Read in June, 2000
The conventional wisdom is that Orwell was still finding his voice as an author when he wrote this semi-semi-autobiographical novel about the degenerate managers of a British rubber plantation in Burma (He was coming off of a long stint as an imperial policeman there) and thus cranked out a Somerset Maugham potboiler about intrigue and backbiting in a fetid swamp at the edge of the Raj.
I disagree. The prose is concise in the same way it is in his last, best novels. (There were two or three me...more
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Jbryon
05/28/08

Read in May, 2008
Burmese Days chronicles the beginning of the end for the British Raj in Burma and British Imperialism in general. As the subtext of the story is the decline of a brutal empire, it is by no means a surprisingly violent book, but given the period in which it was first published, I had to remind myself how shocking its release must have been to readers. Orwell saw first hand the violence arising out of colonialism, having served in the Indian Imperial Police in Burma from 1922-1927. This novel and ...more
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Judy
10/16/08

bookshelves: fiction
I read this as a result of picking up "Finding George Orwell in Burma."

This is an engaging, quite enjoyablenovel. I haven't read many standard fiction books in a long while, and this was quite a treat.

The characters are well written and entertaining. If you have an interest in colonialism, this is a good book for you to read. Weaved into the story are arguments about colonialism, race, and relationships. The dialogs that commence are extremely enjoyable. There are some laugh-ou...more
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Laura
03/29/08

bookshelves: fiction, history
Read in March, 2008
This has been lying around my house for years and I haven't read it before today. It was pretty good, I must say-- definitely not my favorite Orwell, but I did appreciate it quite a lot. Orwell has a wonderful capacity for making one feel utterly embarrassed and disgusted. It's quite masterful. However, I did notice that he went to a bit of a length to slip socialism in. No idea why he had to have Florey be a socialist. It wasn't relevant. It seemed a bit silly, knowing Orwell, that he would hav...more
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Will
02/14/08

Read in February, 2008
It was okay. Orwell is pleasantly cynical about EVERYONE: the corrupt Burmese local rising up the ranks through bribes; husband-hunting British women, Burmese women prostituting themselvs; British officers drinking and whoring the days away.

But it's a bit ponderous. I had to push to get through it.

If you realize that this is the guy who ends up writing 1984, you can see he's already seeing the world as sort of trapped in a bad place of rich holding down the poor.

----
I'm gonna give ...more
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Kurtis
03/31/07

This is, I think, Orwell's best novel... several years after reading it, I can still vividly remember passages, and the predicament of its hero, who feels compassion for the people of Burma but tries -- way too hard -- to find acceptance and respect among his fellow Englishmen. It is a scathing critique of colonial occupation, but not a club-you-over-the-head catalog of abuses, but a matter-of-fact account of English people preoccupied with their own petty intrigues and politics, and just enough...more
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Sonja
09/26/08

Read in September, 2008
This is about an Englishman living in Burma during the waning days of Britain's vast eastern empire.

I was tempted to give it three stars because I'm extremely fond of Orwell's writing in general. But I didn't find this story particularly compelling, and I confess I only read about 150 pages before giving up. I probably would have finished it if it weren't for the fact that I live in a community with an impoverished public library system whose scarcity of books necessitates short check-out t...more
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Liam
04/07/08

Read in April, 2008
Depressing. I expected this book to be an out and out rejection of imperialism but perhaps that was asking too much for a book written in 1934. Instead Orwell paints a picture of the malaise surrounding a few British officers and businessmen in a small Burmese village drinking themselves numb and/or into fits of rage while native Burmese live voicelessly in the background. A much more explicit understanding of how Orwell felt about the Empire and his experience there (he had been a police office...more
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Burmese Days (Hardcover)
Burmese Days: A Novel (Paperback)
Burmese Days (Penguin Modern Classics)
Burmese Days (Twentieth Century Classics S.)
Burmese Days (Paperback)