Nigeyb's Reviews > Coming Up for Air
Coming Up for Air
by George Orwell
by George Orwell
My preoccupation with British literature set in the immediate pre-WW2 era and in, or around, London continues. I recently read Hangover Square by Patrick Hamilton and that kick started a whole fascination with English literature set in or around London c1939. In addition to Hangover Square, particular recent highlights include...
London Belongs to Me
The Slaves of Solitude
Of Love And Hunger
...it's a rich vein that I continue to mine.
"Coming Up For Air" was my first George Orwell since "Homage to Catalonia" a few years back (whilst preoccupied with books about the Spanish Civil War). I'd also read "1984" and "Animal Farm" when I was a teenager.
This book is another great slice of pre-WW2 English literature. I thoroughly enjoyed it. It evokes the era perfectly. The book is split into four parts. The second part is full of childhood reminiscences from the early twentieth century. The protagonist recalls his childhood from the perspective of the late 1930s. This section reminded me very much of "Cider with Rosie" (one of my favourite books), with the key difference that this is fiction. It made me wonder how Orwell managed to so credibly know, and be able to relate, a childhood in a small rural community. Either way it's a stunning section, and also very cleverly manages to highlight some of the seismic changes that took place for the average person in the UK throughout the twentieth century.
George Bowling, the middle-aged, middle-income protagonist is a great vehicle for Orwell's musings on pre-WW2 England. Bowling is an insightful, straight talking Everyman character who conveys his thoughts with great honesty and self-deprecating humour.
The book also contains some hints at what was to come with "1984" which Orwell would write a few years later - specifically musings on an "after-war" dystopian future characterised by hate, slogans, secret cells etc. Remarkably prescient and demonstrating he was already thinking about some of the themes that were later developed so memorably in "1984".
The end of the book is pretty downbeat and this tone characterises the whole book and therefore might not be to everyone's taste. I loved it. I've already bought Orwell's "Keep the Aspidistra Flying" which I will read soon. If you like any of the books I list at the start of this review then I'm confident you'd enjoy this book too.
London Belongs to Me
The Slaves of Solitude
Of Love And Hunger
...it's a rich vein that I continue to mine.
"Coming Up For Air" was my first George Orwell since "Homage to Catalonia" a few years back (whilst preoccupied with books about the Spanish Civil War). I'd also read "1984" and "Animal Farm" when I was a teenager.
This book is another great slice of pre-WW2 English literature. I thoroughly enjoyed it. It evokes the era perfectly. The book is split into four parts. The second part is full of childhood reminiscences from the early twentieth century. The protagonist recalls his childhood from the perspective of the late 1930s. This section reminded me very much of "Cider with Rosie" (one of my favourite books), with the key difference that this is fiction. It made me wonder how Orwell managed to so credibly know, and be able to relate, a childhood in a small rural community. Either way it's a stunning section, and also very cleverly manages to highlight some of the seismic changes that took place for the average person in the UK throughout the twentieth century.
George Bowling, the middle-aged, middle-income protagonist is a great vehicle for Orwell's musings on pre-WW2 England. Bowling is an insightful, straight talking Everyman character who conveys his thoughts with great honesty and self-deprecating humour.
The book also contains some hints at what was to come with "1984" which Orwell would write a few years later - specifically musings on an "after-war" dystopian future characterised by hate, slogans, secret cells etc. Remarkably prescient and demonstrating he was already thinking about some of the themes that were later developed so memorably in "1984".
The end of the book is pretty downbeat and this tone characterises the whole book and therefore might not be to everyone's taste. I loved it. I've already bought Orwell's "Keep the Aspidistra Flying" which I will read soon. If you like any of the books I list at the start of this review then I'm confident you'd enjoy this book too.
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Reading Progress
| 07/03/2012 | page 52 |
|
18.0% | "My preoccupation with British literature set in the immediate pre-WW2 era and in, or around, London continues. My first George Orwell since 'Homage to Catalonia' a few years back (whilst preoccupied with all things Spanish Civil War) and what a treat it is. I am loving it. Very different from previous Orwell books I've read. Very evocative of the era. The main character is sold gold. Can't wait to pick it up again." |
| 07/03/2012 | page 100 |
|
35.0% | "My goodness I'm enjoying this book. The last fifty pages have been full of childhood reminiscences. The protagonist recalls a childhood in the early twentieth century from the perspective of the late 1930s. It reminds me very much of "Cider With Rosie" (one of my favourite books), with the key difference that this is fiction." |
| 07/04/2012 | page 150 |
|
52.0% | "Eye opening insights into the subtle class distinctions of the 1920s and 1930s...the office-employee class; middling-professional class; the upper crust; Anglo-Indian poverty-stricken officer class; God-fearing shopkeeper class; the low church class; the high tea class; and so on. Wow, Britain may seem class-ridden today but how about that for socio-ecomical classification?" |
