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Orwell: The Authorized Biography [Paperback]

Michael Shelden (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Sheldon ( Friends of Promise: Cyril Connolly and the World of the Horizon ) has written an exhaustive and sometimes exhausting account of the life and work of the English writer who is best known for the classic novels Animal Farm and 1984 . The book traces Orwell's life from his birth as Eric Blair in 1903 in Motihari, India, to his death 46 years later in London. Though much of the detail is intrinsically interesting, like Orwell's deathbed marriage, too much of the material discussed seems unrelated to Orwell's development as a writer and social critic. What Sheldon does best is show how such events and circumstances as war and conflicts with authority shaped Orwell's writing in 13 novels and scores of essays. But even this could have been done in fewer than 373 pages. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

Using the pen name George Orwell, Eric Blair produced lucid memoirs ( Down and Out in Paris and London and Homage to Catalonia ), novels ( Animal Farm and 1984 ), and dozens of essays marked by clear, precise writing and political commitment. But Blair was plagued by feelings of inadequacy, bad health, and the premature death of his wife; in 1950, at the age of 46 and at the height of his literary powers, he died of tuberculosis. Shelden has been given access to new material on Blair, but details on the writer's childhood and adolescence remain sketchy and contradictory. The book is more informative on Blair's adulthood, when Shelden provides anecdotes and quotations from personal and professional letters. More trenchant analysis and informed speculation would have improved this modest biography of an important man of English letters. (Index and photos not seen.)-- Harold Augenbraum, Mercantile Lib., New York
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 624 pages
  • Publisher: Perennial (October 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060921617
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060921613
  • Product Dimensions: 7.7 x 5.4 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #887,028 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Michael Shelden is the author of four literary biographies, including the Pulitzer Prize finalist, Orwell: The Authorized Biography, which was also a New York Times Notable Book. For fifteen years, he was a features writer for the London Daily Telegraph, and for ten years he served as a fiction critic for the Baltimore Sun.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pretending to be a tramp was a quick way of satisfying his urge to fail, March 17, 2008
This review is from: Orwell: The Authorized Biography (Paperback)
Orwell's life was not very mysterious. He left ample traces in his early novels, his essays, journalism and published letters. Still, if you want it as a coherent story instead of a jigsaw puzzle, this book is the place to go. And you get some surprises into the bargain.
Like: I had not realized that what Eric's father did as a professional in the India colonial service throughout his life was the most obnoxious work that he could possibly have done: he was a minor official in the opium authority, which was in charge of maintaining the official opium cultivation and exportation to China.
That, combined with Eric's own 5 years as a policeman in Burma must have put a heavy load of guilt on the young man's mind and conditioned him towards his urge for self-destructiveness that led him to live as a bum and to volunteer for a civil war. Shelden writes that Blair/Orwell had a deep sense of inadequacy throughout his life. Sounds about right.
As an admirer of Orwell's prose, I found the tales of Blair's poetic struggles in young life quite enlightening. Orwell was a man who loved the sound of words. Much of his criticism was about poetry. May that be the foundation for the clarity and simplicity of his writing?
A nice little anecdote (not that many of them in the book): Shelden says Blair was always an aggressive critic, as demonstrated by his habit of using disliked books for target practice as a police officer in Burma.
This bio is the 3rd attempt to write a complete one (i.e. other than the ex-girlfriend's or younger sister's partial view). The first one was seriously hampered by Sonia's refusal to cooperate and even to let the authors (Stansky/Abrahams) quote Orwell's work. The second one (Crick) was 'official', i.e. approved by Sonia, but then it displeased her strongly. Shelden's was written after Sonia's death and with approval by the literary executor.
I am not sure it is the last word, it came out in 91, but it is not a waste of time.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Commendable -- recommendable -- but not quite ideal, August 24, 2009
This review is from: Orwell: The Authorized Biography (Paperback)
George Orwell has become one of the literary icons of the 20th Century and, ironically, someone around whom a cult of personality has developed. I say "ironically" because like Franz Kafka -- and unlike, say, Ernest Hemingway or Rainer Maria Rilke or Jean-Paul Sartre (to name the three who first leap to mind) -- Orwell would not have embraced that development. He was too private . . . and too honest and decent. I don't know whether that makes the biographer's task more difficult in the case of Orwell, but for some reason I feel that the obligations of reliability and responsibility are greater for Orwell's biographer than for Hemingway's -- probably because truth is more important for Orwell. In the case of Michael Shelden and ORWELL: THE AUTHORIZED BIOGRAPHY those obligations become a tad more onerous because the biography is authorized by Orwell's literary executor. I have read a lot by Orwell, but this is the first biography of him that I have read, and I come away feeling that Shelden has commendably discharged the obligations of reliability and responsibility.

Unlike some authorized biographies, Shelden's does not seem to be an exercise in hagiography. To be sure, Shelden clearly admires Orwell. In many respects, of course, that admiration is justified. Orwell's cult persona is that of an eccentric saint, and while Shelden may downplay somewhat Orwell's eccentricities (which still take a distant back seat to those of Kafka), he provides plenty of support for Orwell's saintliness, at least among the pantheon of 20th-Century literary giants. The most obvious and commendable of those "saintly" qualities was Orwell's instinctual habit of backing his liberal political/social beliefs with action, as, for example, living among the "down and out" and voluntarily risking his life as a front-line soldier against Fascism in the Spanish Civil War. In addition, Shelden's biography highlights two other senses in which Orwell deserves respect and admiration. He was a socialist in the relatively non-political sense that he was an advocate of the dignity of the individual regardless of social class. And he was an independent thinker, little influenced by cant and ever-vigilant for hypocrisy.

Here are several miscellaneous points that registered with me while reading this biography. One: Orwell's ambivalence towards success -- which contributed to his adopting, in 1933, a literary pseudonym (his real name being Eric Arthur Blair). Two: The extent to which English life during Orwell's time was permeated by various degrees of censorship, both public and private, and, similarly, the stultifying effect of Britain's libel laws, which necessitated revisions or watering down of most of Orwell's published works pre-WWII. Three: Orwell's admiration for Joyce's "Ulysses" (so different in style from Orwell's own work), particularly because it focused on "the life of the ordinary man in the street" and "the mind of a common man like Leopold Bloom." Four: Orwell's proposal to his American publisher that he write a short life of Mark Twain (unfortunately rejected) -- Orwell and Twain, of course, being so similar in their independence of thought and sensitivity to social injustice.

ORWELL: AN AUTHORIZED BIOGRAPHY is better than most biographies of literary figures that I have read, and having read it I don't feel any need to read any others. So why don't I give this one five stars? It is a close question, but two considerations militate against five stars. First, the biography is on the dry side (as, I admit, are most biographies). Second, I sense -- and I can't readily marshal any evidence to support this sense -- that somehow Shelden has not quite captured the real Orwell. Shelden quotes the following observation of Arthur Koestler, who became a good friend of Orwell's late in his life: "I don't think George ever knew what makes other people tick, because what made him tick was very different from what made most other people tick." Shelden probably comes closer than many would to identifying what made Orwell tick, but I sense that he did not quite hit the mark.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant biography of a literary giant, March 2, 1998
By 
Derek Leaberry (Bennett Point, MD) - See all my reviews
Professor Shelden's biography of Orwell is outstanding and well-researched. Prof. Shelden provides the important details of the molding of Eric Blair- boyhood, school, service in Burma for the Empire- and explains how each experience influenced young Blair yet he doesn't try to feed the reader psychobabble hogwash. Orwell's fitful rise as a writer is especially interesting. Prof. Shelden explains Orwell's various ideological wars and paints a portrait of a non-doctrinaire, humanist socialist who was a more astute critic of Stalinism or ideological socialism than anyone to his right. What I found refreshing about Prof. Shelden's account is that the reader finishes the bio without really knowing the writer's own politics. He allows Orwell to speak for himself.
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