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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Animal Farm is instructive for our presidential election.
2008 is the ideal time to apply the principles that we have learned from Animal Farm and apply them to November's 2008 Presidential election. Just as Napolean, the pig, instigated a rebellion against the owner of the farm (Jones) by talking about how great things will be once the animals ruled the farm, today we are told by the Obama Democrats that once Bush and the...
Published on September 28, 2008 by Michael Gordon

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2 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Overrated
This is supposed to be some literary masterpiece, but I think it is pretty bland and unoriginal. Obviously, it is symbolic of society falling apart under a corrupt government(Communism), and the author uses animals as the characters in order to compare them to humans behaving like animals. That is really all there is to it, and, as I said, the symbolism is very obvious...
Published on February 13, 2009 by J. Blackhorse


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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Animal Farm is instructive for our presidential election., September 28, 2008
This review is from: Animal Farm (Paperback)
2008 is the ideal time to apply the principles that we have learned from Animal Farm and apply them to November's 2008 Presidential election. Just as Napolean, the pig, instigated a rebellion against the owner of the farm (Jones) by talking about how great things will be once the animals ruled the farm, today we are told by the Obama Democrats that once Bush and the Republicans are thrown off the farm (Washington), that all will be well, that things will look wonderful, and that none of us will ever be hungry again. In Animal Farm, though, the animals were far worse off after Mr. Jones was kicked off the farm. Like Obama, Napolean also did not have any experience in running a farm, but this did not stop him from stating that he would be more competent and able to handle the farm. Further, once Napolean took charge of the farm, the interests of the other animals started to decline more and more. He started to remove any sense of democratic principles by eliminating the need for public comment and strongly took action against any potential dissent. This is exactly where the Obama Democrats want to take our country--first, by stating that they (and he alone) can manage the country -- even though there is no experience to suggest that he ought to, and secondly, by eliminating any form of dissent by destroying talk radio and also by heavily regulating and taxing the internet in order to suppress the one free and open medium that is available to counter their message. The lesson of Animal Farm is clear: those who claim to provide us with utopia on earth often will create hell instead through dictatorship, centralization of authority, and a desire to obtain power for power's sake. If we learn the lessons of Animal Farm, our nation will be far better off.
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5.0 out of 5 stars It still rings true for our future, January 24, 2009
By 
Jerm N Wong (California, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Animal Farm (Paperback)
Even though the book parallels the Russian Revolution, the message still compares with our nations today. If you haven't read this book before, this will be an eyeopener. Orwell makes his point and sticks it to you because he uses the animals as an example of what could potentially happen.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Animal Farm Review, August 30, 2008
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This review is from: Animal Farm (Paperback)
Once Upon A Time, there was a farm called the Manor Farm, and the animals on the farm are very mistreated. One day, the animals rise up against their human masters, and establish a near-utopian society. But promises of equality and plenty soon begin to be forgotten... until conditions are worse than they were under the humans.
A cautionary tale of the corrupting effects of power, George Orwell intended this to be a commentary on the depradations of the Soviet Union. A very facinating book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Animals Gone Wild...., August 29, 2008
By 
T. Brown (Brooklyn, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Animal Farm (Paperback)
Animals Gone Wild...
By Lily Starbuck

George Orwell's fable, Animal Farm, tells the tale of frustrated animals who overthrow their master Mr. Jones, who owns the Manor Farm. Through many hard times and conflicts it comes down to who can survive the new farm life. New leaders, new problems, new jobs, everything is changing for the better. Or is it? Orwell is able to portray the idea "absolute power corrupts absolutely." Animal Farm is a quick read and has a loud and clear message, which Orwell shows through a microcosm of the 1917 Russian revolution.

The animals have one goal in mind after they defeat Mr. Jones. That goal would be change. And through this change there will be laws, the Seven Commandments that will help keep the animals equal with one another and make sure the animals don't acquire human-like habits, because the animals don't want to become like the humans who have treated them so terribly and striped them of their freewill. While reading the book you see some animals are starting to create a different status for themselves on the farm, making them more important and able to instruct as well as make decisions for the other animals. I know that while reading Animal Farm I felt angry at the animals that let a new leader control them. Only some of the characters didn't remain loyal to their new leader, and that to me showed bravery, for standing up for something they knew had to be stopped.

George Orwell used farm animals to illustrate the struggle for the control of the Soviet Union. The two pigs, Snowball and Napolean, from Animal Farm resemble Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stallin who both fought over power in Russia. Both Napolean and Stallin took all the power for themselves and became greedy and selfish, therefore not fulfilling their promises to their followers. The struggle for authority, throughout history, is an ongoing process.

I truly enjoyed reading Animal Farm. It wasn't a book where you couldn't put it down but one you find time to read in the oddest moments. George Orwell was an amazing writer. He made learning a life lesson and learning part of history simple and enjoyable. And I don't even like reading books about talking animals and yet I'm recommending this fabulous piece of literature.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Utopian Idealism Unmaksed, August 26, 2008
By 
Glenn Yates (Nashville, TN USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Animal Farm (Paperback)
It is the rare political book that is both entertaining and thought provoking. Rarer still to be unforgettable and insightful and life-changing. Animal Farm, for me was all this.

The allegory is powerful and the use of farm animals both clever and entertaining, and helped makes the story all the more vivid and memorable. The story is well know, a group of farm animals eventually led by the boar Napoleon, overthrow the capitalist farmer and create an idealistic worker's paradise. Little by little and bit by bit they become not only as corrupt as the former system, but even worse as exemplified by their ruthlessness and hypocrisy. The reader comes away much more cynical about utopian ideals, which sounds like a bad thing but is actually a good thing. Incredibly powerful book, with the weight of truth and some kind of native energy that makes a despairing fairy-tale into a life-changing lesson. I've read plenty of books that I've enjoyed more, but few I've been so drastically impacted by. This book is a must for an adolescent, and if you missed it then even if you're eighty-five pick it up and read it now. It's both historical and timeless.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Not Free SF Reader, September 2, 2007
This review is from: Animal Farm (Paperback)
Animal Farm is a dark satire, showing us what the author considers are some of the worse implications of communism and its failures, and human politics in general.

He uses a farm animal setting as the means to do this, as the various creatures set up their own class structures, leadership and indulge in repression and violence.




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5.0 out of 5 stars Very enthusing reading, July 25, 2007
This review is from: Animal Farm (Paperback)
Animal Farm by George Orwell is an excellent dramatization of the late Soviet Revolution. The author depicts all characters as animals in a farm where all the events of the revolution take place. I was originally introduced to this writing by Orwell in of my English classes in College. It was on the textbooks I kept with my even after graduation.

The author's style and sequencing of events is absolutely fabulous. This is a great reading full of inspiring quotes and many lessons to learn form.

If you are interested in learning about the Soviet revolution in an easy and humorous way, then get your hands on this fascinating story.
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2 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Overrated, February 13, 2009
This review is from: Animal Farm (Paperback)
This is supposed to be some literary masterpiece, but I think it is pretty bland and unoriginal. Obviously, it is symbolic of society falling apart under a corrupt government(Communism), and the author uses animals as the characters in order to compare them to humans behaving like animals. That is really all there is to it, and, as I said, the symbolism is very obvious. It doesn't take a genius to figure out what the author is trying to say becuase he spells it out for you. The story itself is boring, lifeless and dispassionate. The animal characters have no sense of unique identity. It is just another story created for someone to get on a soapbox.
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Animal Farm
Animal Farm by George Orwell (Paperback - September 1, 2004)
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