Finding George Orwell in Burma
Emma Larkin - Author
A brave and revelatory reconnaissance of modern Burma, one of the world's grimmest and most shuttered police states, using as its compass the life and work of George Orwell, the man many in Burma call simply "the prophet"
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Emma Larkin's posts on the Penguin Blog
"Well-researched and fascinating...Remarkable."—San Francisco ChronicleOver the years the American writer Emma Larkin has spent traveling in Burma, she's come to know all too well
the many ways this brutal police state can be described as "Orwellian." The life of the mind exists in a state of siege
in Burma, and it long has. But Burma's connection to George Orwell is not merely metaphorical; it is much deeper
and more real. Orwell's mother was born in Burma, at the height of the British raj, and Orwell was fundamentally
shaped by his experiences in Burma as a young man working for the British Imperial Police. When Orwell died, the
novel-in-progress on his desk was set in Burma. It is the place George Orwell's work holds in Burma today,
however, that most struck Emma Larkin. She was frequently told by Burmese acquaintances that Orwell did not write
one book about their country - his first novel, Burmese Days - but in fact he wrote three, the "trilogy" that
included Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four. When Larkin quietly asked one Burmese
intellectual if he knew the work of George Orwell, he stared blankly for a moment and then said, "Ah, you mean the
prophet!" "One of the most unusual travelogues to come out of Southeast Asia in some time, and a truer picture of authoritarianism than anyone has written since, perhaps, Orwell himself."—Mother Jones "[This] mournful, meditative, appealingly idiosyncratic book is a hybrid, an exercise in literary detection but also a political travelogue that uses Burma to explain Prwell, and Orwell—especially the Orwell of Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four—to explain the miseries of present-day Myanmar (as it is now known)."—The New York Times "This is one of those rare books, a beautifully crafted account of a journey which actually takes the reader somewhere new and unusual. Emma Larkin did not just go searching for Orwell, she found him. Along the way, she made the chilling discovery that in modern-day Burma, the totalitarian tyrannies he evoked in Nineteen Eighty-Four are horrifyingly alive and well."—Jon Lee Anderson "Combining literary criticism and solid field reporting, [Larkin] captures the country at its best, and more often, its worst."—San Francisco Chronicle
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