
In his probing and revelatory biography of one of the great prose stylists
of this century, Michael Shelden breaks new ground in the evocation of George
Orwells personal life and in our understanding of his art. Based on original
interviews, previously undiscovered letters and documents, and astute literary
detective work by Shelden,
Orwell is the major biography of one of
the great yet elusive literary figures of our time.
The Cold War helped make Orwell a successful author by turning him into an
anti-Communist icon, but Michael Shelden’s biography renews our appreciation
of his place in literary, as opposed to political, history. Few writers have
had as exciting a life as Orwell’s. An Old Etonian and an officer in the
Indian Imperial Police, he was also a dishwasher in a Paris hotel, a hop
picker in Kent, an investigative journalist, a wounded veteran of the Spanish
Civil War, a celebrated novelist, and -like Keats and D.H. Lawrence before
him- a dreamer whose life was cut short by tuberculosis. The human qualities
that make the story of Orwell's life so appealing dominate this biography
-his integrity, his humility and courage, his odd mixture of radical and
conservative attitudes, and his struggle to balance the public and private
sides of his character.
Shelden's portrait of Orwell is an unusually complex and subtle one. Orwell
thrived on contradiction. He called himself a socialist, yet he was always
pointing out the weaknesses in socialism. He devoted enormous efforts to
writing his novels, yet admitted near the end of his life, "I am not a real
novelist anyway." He was an intellectual who ran a small village shop and
referred to himself as a "grocer"; he was an ex-policeman who lived among
tramps.
In Shelden's biography, which draws on a wide range of unpublished sources,
Orwell is brought vividly to life as a passionate, vital, engaging literary
personality, not the cold, distant, political pessimist he is often portrayed
as. Meticulously researched and stylishly written, this is undoubtedly one
of the most important literary biographies to appear in years.
Michael Shelden is the author of
Friends of Promise: Cyril Connolly
and the World of Horizon.
He has written extensively on literary and social topics for periodicals
on both sides of the Atlantic, including the
Washington Post, the
Daily Telegraph (London). and the
Times Literary Supplement
(London). He is currently Professor of English at Indiana State University.
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