Details from 50 newly released letters echo scenes between Winston and Julia in the dystopian novel

The feeling of longing for a lost love can be powerful, and George Orwell makes full use of it in his work. In Nineteen Eighty-Four, his great dystopian novel, the hero Winston Smith’s memories of walks taken with Julia, the woman he can never have, give the story its humanity.

Now a stash of largely unseen private correspondence, handed over to an academic archive on Friday by the author’s son, reveal just how large a role romantic nostalgia played in Orwell’s own life. The contents are also proof that the writer was an unlikely but enthusiastic ice-skater.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Martin Rowson on government U-turns and Tory rebellions – cartoon

Continue reading…

‘They said I wasn’t hot enough’: Carey Mulligan hits out again at magazine review

Variety review of black comedy Promising Young Woman prompts actor to speak…

UK ‘used to be a leader on climate’, lament European lawmakers

MEPs react to ‘tragic’ findings revealing UK falling behind EU in key…