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Julia

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London, chief city of Airstrip One, the third most populous province of Oceana. It's 1984 and Julia Worthing works as a mechanic fixing the novel-writing machines in the Fiction Department at the Ministry of Truth. Under the ideology of IngSoc and the rule of the Party and its leader Big Brother, Julia is a model citizen—cheerfully cynical, believing in nothing and caring not at all about politics. She routinely breaks the rules but also collaborates with the regime whenever necessary. Everyone likes Julia. A diligent member of the Junior Anti-Sex League (though she is secretly promiscuous) she knows how to survive in a world of constant surveillance, Thought Police, Newspeak, Doublethink, child spies and the black markets of the prole neighbourhoods. She's very good at staying alive.

But Julia becomes intrigued by a colleague from the Records Department—a mid-level worker of the Outer Party called Winston Smith—when she sees him locking eyes with a superior from the Inner Party at the Two Minutes Hate. And when one day, finding herself walking toward Winston, she impulsively hands him a note—a potentially suicidal gesture—she comes to realise that she's losing her grip and can no longer safely navigate her world.

Seventy-five years after Orwell finished writing his iconic novel, Sandra Newman has tackled the world of Big Brother in a truly convincing way, offering a dramatically different, feminist narrative that is true to and stands alongside the original. For the millions of readers who have been brought up with Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, here, finally, is a provocative, vital and utterly satisfying companion novel.

400 pages, Hardcover

First published October 19, 2023

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,842 reviews
Profile Image for Jack Edwards.
Author1 book278k followers
January 3, 2025
Throw me in Room 101 and you'll find me locked in there with only this book to read.............

Normally I love a (feminist) literary retelling but -- though it was fun to dive back into Orwell's 1984 and reimagine events from Julia's perspective -- this book only made me appreciate how much better Orwell's original was. Of course the comparison is inevitable, and tackling a modern classic is a respectfully ballsy risk, but this only proves that Orwell's 1984 truly is a timeless, untouchable masterpiece.

'Julia', on the other hand, kind of reads like one of those books published in the post-Hunger Games teen-dystopia craze around 2014 with nothing especially exciting to say. Winston Smith is belittled to such a one-dimensional weenie that I found it borderline cringeworthy, and the ideological discussion is basic, if not nonexistent. I'm sad because I expected this to be a new favourite, but at least it made me want to read 1984 again to wash myself clean of this.
Profile Image for Roman Clodia.
2,764 reviews4,228 followers
November 12, 2023
Winston was more interested in 'Spanking Stories', of which she remembered only that there was spanking, some of which was done with a shoe

Yep, that really is a genuine quotation from this book (location 1633 in my Kindle edition). Not just does it exemplify the 'lite' way in which this book re-writes Orwell's just-as-relevant-today 1984, but it showcases some of the clumsy writing (spanking stories contain... spanking) and an almost prurient interest in sex. Julia in the original does indeed have a wayward sensuality which is used to encode her propensity not to conform to the diktats of Big Brother but pushing this to the extreme as this book does (complete with descriptions of Winston's limp penis, lots of pseudo-daring mentions of masturbation, and their rather romance novel embraces (see quotations below) just cheapens the message of the original and makes this novel sound rather childish.

The blurb states: 'Julia is a model citizen - cheerfully cynical, believing in nothing and caring not at all about politics' already highlighting quite a departure from Orwell's bleak vision where this kind of freedom to even be cynical about the totalitarian dictatorship has been obliterated and is another example of where this book doesn't live up to its predecessor, giving itself some wiggle room to be less grim and despairing.

To be honest, I'm really not sure what the point of this book is. It does touch on the plight of women in an extremist state - but Atwood's been there before with which, again, is more powerful, more terrifying and more convincing than Julia.

Newman does go overboard with the interrogation and torture scenes, especially Room 101, but to my taste blood and gore isn't a replacement for the icy political analysis of Orwell. It also feels like the exposition and explanations in this book - the two plus two equals five concept, or even Room 101 itself - are over-explained as if we're not going to get them - quite different from Orwell's clean, precise prose which shatters with its uncompromising brevity and clarity.

The really big disappearance in Julia is any kind of ideological underpinning to Newman's world - though, to be kind, perhaps the assumption is that readers will come to this in addition to 1984 and, hopefully, not instead of that original. The most monstrous thing about Orwell's work is the underlying cold logic of totalitarianism, which is self-perpetuating and quite self-conscious about its own remorseless brutality and inhumanity.

There's more plot in this book than I would prefer, not least a coda where . It reminded me of all those YA dystopias where

So, would I recommend this? Not really. Not just does Orwell not need any kind of intervention or companion piece but his chilling and desolate warning seems all the more pertinent today with the rise of the extreme Right across the globe alongside leftist authoritarian states (and Newman is quite specific in having her resistance fighting against the 'red dictatorship', quite a blinkered and one-sided view). On a day when we have seen the Tory Home Secretary using Doublethink to call a protest for peace a 'hate march' and incite far-Right neo-Nazi extremists like the English Defence League to clash violently with the Met Police at the Cenotaph, watering down Orwell's vision, sexing it up and confining it to a 'red' menace seems unconvincing, a little irresponsible and kind of missing the point to me.
Profile Image for Ron Charles.
1,133 reviews50.2k followers
October 24, 2023
As the clocks strike 13 once again, it’s time to venture back to Oceania and experience that dystopia with fresh eyes � or other eyes. That’s exactly what Sandra Newman does in her subversive new novel, “Julia.�

With the approval of the Orwell estate, it’s a retelling of �1984� from the perspective of Winston Smith’s lover. The effect of that single shift is uncanny: The world Julia describes is entirely familiar but subtly altered from the one Winston experiences.

In addition to filling out the tragedy of Julia’s adolescence, Newman introduces several ingenious twists that let the plot proceed largely as expected but with curiously different implications.

Except for one extraordinary scene, everything Newman does takes place within the confines of that grim original story. Somehow, she has stuck her tweezers into Orwell’s bottle and rebuilt the ship pointing the other way.

Many of the characters, the Ministries of Truth and Love, the ever-shrinking dictionary, the constantly rewritten histories, the Two Minutes Hate, the endless war with Eurasia (or is it Eastasia?) and all your favorite horrors from �1984� are here.


But while “Julia� depends on Orwell for its architecture, the novel’s ironic tone is Newman’s own. By switching the perspective from Winston, she has effectively expanded the story’s palette.

The realm Newman describes is no more free nor tolerant than the one Orwell made famous, but it’s given considerably more room to. . . .

To read the rest of this review, go to The Washington Post:
Profile Image for Alexander Peterhans.
Author2 books279 followers
May 31, 2023
‘And who are you? I seem to have forgotten.�
‘I am Julia.�
‘Oh, yes. You betrayed me. I remember. They told me about it so many times.�
‘I did. I should like to have saved you, but I had no choice.�
‘Yes,� he said simply. ‘That’s the horrid thing. One has no choice, and yet one must live through it exactly as if one had.�


After the trend of recontextualising Greek mythology through a female lense, the next step seems to be recontextualising classic literature - which I, for one, think is a really fun, exciting idea. Quite dangerous perhaps, because it can easily blow up in an author's face, but that shouldn't be a reason for not rummaging around in someone else's work.

"Things will happen to you from which you could not recover, if you lived a thousand years. Never again will you be capable of ordinary human feeling. Everything will be dead inside you. Never again will you be capable of love, or friendship, or joy of living , or laughter, or curiosity, or courage, or integrity. You will be hollow. We shall squeeze you empty, and then we shall fill you with ourselves."

Nineteen Eighty-Four is one of my favourite books, which makes a work like this only more exciting. And I did initially fall into the trap of constantly comparing Julia to Nineteen Eighty-Four, in language used (for some reason, words like "having a crush on" and "dopily" sound.. off), but especially in its worldbuilding. Does this fit in what we know from the original novel, would that work? But then you also have to remind yourself that the original is told as filtered through Winston Smith.

Dear reader, I soon got over myself, and let all that go. And that is in great part because of Sandra Newman's excellent work - I got swept up in Julia's story, in what happened in her young life, in how she approached the life in Airstrip One.

"When a shop had been singled out for destruction by the marshals, she happily threw bricks through its windows. If a book was handed to her, she gladly tossed it into the waiting fire. Who didn’t like the sweet, hysterical sound of breaking glass? Who didn’t like the brave smell of gasoline and the brightness of the conflagration?"

Julia in this book has a lot more agency than Smith has in his book - yes, she endures a lot of horrible experiences (including some sexual abuse, and a lot of physical violence, not to mention the eye-watering rigmarole of Room 101), but she also finds it in herself to refocus her thoughts, to fight back, in some way. This can be a problem for you: the original novel more or less grinds down any idea of hope, or a future. The state is all powerful, and will even destroy the love you feel for others. The state always wins. There literally is no escape. Julia proposes that there may be a way out (although there's strong hints that whatever changes, everything is cyclical).

Winston Smith is more of a background character in Julia's life. She thinks him attractive, but she isn't so much in love with him (she is with someone else). She likes quite a lot of people, including women. This too might be a problem for you. The idea of 'love conquers all except it doesn't' sits firmly at the centre of Nineteen Eighty-Four, and you could see that as being weakened by the notion that Julia isn't all that into Winston. I'm being wishy-washy here, because I haven't made my own mind up yet.

"The day following that afternoon at the church, Julia came to work to find Essie had a replacement. This was a very willing but ignorant girl with the preposterous name of Typity. It was one of the new ultra-Party names; its letters stood for ‘Three-Year Plan In Two Years�. The fate of such names was to be resented by their bearers, and, with each new person Typity met, the first words from her mouth were a hasty, ‘Everybody calls me Tippi.�

Julia lives in a women's hostel, with a lot of other Outer Party women in their twenties. Here we're introduced to Nationalities - a Nationality basically is a person of colour, who is part of the Outer Party (like Julia and Winston), but is still looked down upon by the Inner Party. I found this an interesting addition to Orwell's world, but in the end the role of Nationalities in the novel is small, a couple of background characters.

There is a big twist, which I won't spoil, that completely recontextualises Nineteen Eighty-Four and Julia's part in it. It literally changes everything, and it's so dramatic I wonder what people will think of it. I thought it was a daring, almost shocking take on the original, but Newman makes it work. Julia also has a tendency to make completely clear what remains opaque in Nineteen Eighty-Four, but then switch the opaqueness to other, new things.

Some people will get hung up on the 'feminist' moniker, I suppose, but as far as I can see 'feminist' literally means 'from a woman's point of view', that's how it read like to me. So you get young Outer Party women being abused by Inner Party men, then get pregnant and having illegal abortions - but to me that completely fits in Orwell's world, surely.

Julia offers hope (albeit laced with cyanide), where Nineteen Eighty-Four offers none. I think that's where opinion will be split on whether this novel is succesful or not. I think it's largely succesful, and it was an engrossing, sometimes harrowing and terrifying read, quite beautifully composed.

(Thanks to Mariner Books for providing me with an ARC through Edelweiss)
Profile Image for Blaine.
939 reviews1,049 followers
October 24, 2023
Update 10/24/23: Reposting my review to celebrate that today is publication day!

All her life, Julia had obeyed the unwritten rules that kept her far from guilt. She had known who was safe, and felt an unfeigned disgust for unsafe people. Instinctively she’d loved the lucky and clever. If she ever took a risk, it wasn’t for fools. It wasn’t for the dead or those half-dead. It was actually cruel to give them hope.

‘So you may take this as a fact. You are not to be harmed. You will believe this, I hope, before you leave this room. You are one of our people and no one can harm you again. This I can promise. Now, sit.� He gestured toward an armchair. ‘We have a great deal to discuss.�

‘Yes,� he said simply. ‘That’s the horrid thing. One has no choice, and yet one must live through it exactly as if one had.�

Thanks to NetGalley and Mariner Books for sending me an ARC of Julia in exchange for an honest review.

Julia is a companion novel to . It tells the same basic story, but from Julia’s perspective rather than Winston’s (and with a couple of extra chapters that extend the story). In the same way that would make no sense without having first read , I cannot imagine this novel would work as a standalone as too much context is not explained within these pages.

Julia had some aspects I enjoyed. I just reread to have it fresh in my mind, and I was struck all over again by Winston’s hatred of Julia before he actually meets and talks to her. He’s kind of like a modern day incel, and seeing Julia recognize that “lust and rage� within him and ridicule him for it was a nice corrective. The author made great use of small details and minor characters from the original book to give this story depth. How did Julia get the note she passed to Winston to begin their affair? Why did Parsons and Ampleforth get arrested? This story provides an answer to those and many other questions. And there is much more generally about the mechanics of life inside and outside London, the bombings and the violence, as well as about the black market and the proles and how they live, which was all interesting.

But is Julia as great as the blurb claims? Is it “truly convincing,� “vital and utterly satisfying�? I’m afraid not, for reasons large and small. It rarely dips into the political explanations that help make the original novel so riveting. On a surface level, this book is more graphic than the original, both in terms of violence and in terms of sex and sexuality. One of the extraordinary things about is that it appeals to people of all moral and political stripes (we just seem to argue about which side is trying to Thought Police the other). But I expect a substantial number of potential readers will be turned off by the author’s decision to include a rather graphically described abortion in the early pages, a fair bit of on-page sex, and quite a bit of profanity.

But my issues with Julia go to the heart of the story being told, and to the way it interprets—I would say misinterprets�. And please know I don’t say that lightly, as this novel is authorized by the Orwell estate. But I would argue that a huge part of the enduring appeal of the original novel is its utter hopelessness. That version of Oceania is a tyrannical, fascist, totalitarian state led by true believers who will stop at nothing to preserve their power and seem poised to rule forever. Winston Smith believes himself to be engaging in a fatal act of rebellion merely by writing a diary and daring to yearn for a small bit of freedom, and he is utterly broken for it. That version of Oceania is simply terrifying. Julia, on the other hand, presents a much less powerful Oceania that is led by just another bunch of old, hypocritical men who come up with ‘rules for thee but not for me.� Julia Worthing is a sex-positive woman who commits sexcrime, but not really thoughtcrime, because to her it’s all a game of trying to live right, limit mistakes, have cards to play if something goes wrong. All of which makes this version of Oceania far more pedestrian. And that’s without even talking about the three biggest changes this book makes:

Julia certainly swings for the fences. I’m sure the author is going to sell a lot of books, and I’m good with that. She obviously worked hard to weave her story in and around the original. It has a definite point of view, an interesting ending, and it will encourage you to reexamine certain elements of . This book’s version of the scene in Room 101 alone makes it worth the read. That said, the author is going to get a lot of criticism from people like me who might have loved what is ultimately a very professional fan fiction but just think the author made some fundamental alterations to the story that cheapened what makes the original so great, and I’m ok with that too. But even though I didn’t love it, I’d still recommend trying this book to anyone who’s read .
Profile Image for Dee (Delighting in the Desert).
521 reviews124 followers
January 13, 2024
3 “it’s not you, it’s me� stars. I was really very intrigued by this authorized, feminist retelling of �1984�, but the honest truth is I just find dystopian literature upsetting & a real slog-fest these days due to the fact that we’re seemingly living in a pretty awful one ourselves. It's pretty true to the original and very well-written, which of course inspires just too much introspection from this particular rather world-weary reader�
Profile Image for Sarah-Hope.
1,352 reviews183 followers
November 29, 2023
Sandra Newman's Julia—a retelling of 1984 from the perspective of Winston's love interest who was never fully fleshed out in the original novel—sounded fascinating from the start. And it is fascinating. It's one of those turn-it-over-and-over-in-your-head-for-days-after-reading titles, and I've been turning it over, but now it's time to review before too much slips my mind. Rather than trying to write an "orderly" review, I want to point out some aspects of the book that I particularly appreciated.

� First off, thank you, thank you, thank you Ms. Newman for making this cardboard cutout of a character into a lively, intelligent woman. I found the way Julia functioned primarily as someone Winston could react to in 1984 profoundly irritating.

� Second, Newman nails life in Oceania. Nails it. Julia looks at her world and sees. While Winston was embedded in his own mind, through Julia we have a vivid depiction of daily life in Oceania—community housing for unmarried women, a black market between party members and proles, a government plan to create "sex-free" (as in not requiring sex for conception) babies, endless efforts to travel the explosive territory of newspeak.

� Third, it complicates Julia's motivations in ways that are fascinating, but that I don't want to go into detail about because of spoilers.

Julia isn't just a 1984 knock-off. It builds on 1984 and respects that novel's truths, but it also offers a more complex, detailed, twisted, directed-by-unseeable-motivations world than did 1984.

I'm not sure about the ending. That's one of the turning-it-over-in-my-head items I haven't yet worked through, but this novel is very much worth reading in its own right and for the vividness it brings to Orwell's original novel.

I received a free electronic review copy of this title from the publisher via Edelweiss; the opinions are my own.
Profile Image for s.penkevich.
1,495 reviews12.7k followers
Want to read
April 13, 2023
Huh, the Orwell estate approved Sandra Newman to write a , so that sounds pretty interesting and I'm hopeful.
Profile Image for Dan.
376 reviews27 followers
November 14, 2023
"Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street building has been renamed, every date has been altered. And the process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped."
- Nineteen Eighty-Four
7 reviews
November 12, 2023
Hyperbolic blurb reviews and the fact that I’m teaching the original at A level of course led me to preorder ‘Julia� and read it as soon as I could.
I’m disappointed. The potential was there to create a radical retelling with a genuinely 21st century feminist Julia. The thing that immediately put me off was the early use of the c- word and a fair bit of on-page sex. Yawn. Genuinely wondering why authors do this. It’s not necessary, and in this case did not add anything. Yes ok we get it, Julia loved sex, but did Orwell need to depict sex scenes and use vile language? Surely if one learns anything from reading any of Orwell’s work it is that clarity and craftsmanship do not require tawdry tricks to engage the reader. This aspect was also disappointing on a feminist level. The idea of a woman using sex-as-power is very 1990s (again, yawn) and, in my opinion, the patriarchy gets the last laugh on this. It would have been far more interesting to explore what Julia could achieve without having to use her body. Perhaps she couldn’t in Oceania; maybe that’s the point? Perhaps as women we will never be free from our ‘vesselhood�, but with this respect I believe that other authors have explored this far more stunningly. Margaret Atwood in ‘The Handmaid’s Tale�; Naomi Alderman in ‘The Power�. I wonder what they would have done with ‘Julia�? (Seriously- was Atwood asked?)

The additional characters were a little flat and too briefly developed, especially in the final chapters which take us beyond the end of the original novel. I’m not sure that we should have met BB with a real name. Was this meant to be anticlimactic? It was, but not in a particularly profound way. A bit limp. Again, perhaps deliberate but just not enough of a reposte, for me.

The bits I appreciated were the links with the original- the dust, the paperweight, the mother issues, the direct pasting of dialogue; the plot mirroring - all skilfully handled. The plot twist in Julia’s role was excellent, but not dark enough.

I’m aware that this is all quite negative. I’m trying to like the book because I really wanted to love it. I just expected “a feminist retelling of Julia� to be stronger, more breathtaking, more assertive. There are big swerves away from the plot so why not go larger? Or be far more subtle. But a few timid steps away from the power and horror of Orwell’s nightmare vision just doesn’t work.

Ultimately, perhaps any attempt to repackage Orwell’s 1984 is going to be difficult due to its genuinely iconic status. The main fault in the 1948 novel for anyone reading it post the 1960s is indeed Julia’s submissive character. If we want to go all poststructuralist about it, then yes the silences in the text reveal the context. I would suggest that a voice attempting to speak into that silence, at a distance of 75 years, could have been a bit braver and louder.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for AndiReads.
1,366 reviews160 followers
June 6, 2023
These days this sort of book just isn't for the faint hearted. If you are reading this review though, I bet you will love it. The estate of George Orwell granted permission for this feminist retelling of 1984. Much of the setting is the same but our story is told through Julia, formerly only known by her first name and a foil to the story on Winston Smith.

Sandra Newman however has painted a complex character in Julia - giving us the inside line on who she is, what she thinks and what drives her actions including the fated moment when she passes a note to Smith. If you are a fan of 1984 I guarantee you will love this story. Newman has paid homage, while also adding electric details to a well known novel.
#marinerBooks #Julia #SandraNewman
Profile Image for Shirin ≽^•⩊•^≼ t..
648 reviews114 followers
November 11, 2023
12 % is a very small amount for wanting to give any idea about a book, but I really couldn't handle it anymore. I think the retelling of one of the best books of all time was a mistake, I had too many expectations, I compared it with George Orwell and found nothing alike, even the main character Julia. The plot did not remind me of 1984, the detail about the places was poor, and worst of all was the characters, even their appearance description was different, Julia wasn't one I used to know and honestly, I didn't want to continue reading and destroy her image!

Thanks to Granta Publications for ARC via NetGalley, and apology for my harsh honest review.
Profile Image for Dr. K.
590 reviews85 followers
November 24, 2023
This felt like 1984 and handmaid's tale were put in a blender and the horror dial was set to an 11.

Obviously, this book follows Julia and her life in Oceania. We revisit familiar characters, and of course Winston Smith, and other concepts that Orwell left us: 2+2=5, room 101, rewriting history, newspeak, telescreens, big brother, etc etc etc. and I wasn't sure if and how the world would be expended beyond that.

And oh boy. This book left me more horrified than many of the horror books I typically read. The bleakness is akin to bleakness in movies like Children of Men and the Japanese movie Kairo (Pulse). The nightmares that Julia has, and are described so vividly, make the Saw movies comparatively tame. I'm using cinematic comparisons because this book is tremendously cinematic. The descriptions of horror linger and extend through every horrific detail. This is especially true of the 80% mark, when Julia is captured and tortured in the ministry of Love and experiences room 101. And what follows may well have broken my brain.

And the themes... oh how I love a good exploration of themes! In the feminist realm, there is a lot about reproductive coercion, maternal bonds, female friendships (and more than friendships), using sexuality to gain power, etc etc etc. but this book focuses most on the tension between Truth and Narrative, things Orwell explored almost a century ago and that continue to feel painfully relevant. The last few moments of this book are absolutely chilling in that regard, and I'll be thinking about this one for a while.

I try to be stingy with giving out five stars, but I can't imagine giving this retelling anything less. Colour me impressed. I'm so glad that the Orwell estate authorized this powerful counter-piece to the classic. Highly recommended if you enjoy female-centric dystopian/speculative fiction, have at least a cursory familiarity with the original book, and have a strong stomach for physical and psychological torture.


With that, I think it's time for my banana. (The mild spoiler here is that an Important Character looks forward to their daily banana)

I only have one question for the author: Brave New World retelling when??
Profile Image for Kim Lockhart.
1,219 reviews177 followers
October 24, 2023
The first thing to know about this novel is that the author gained the full support and blessing of the Orwell Estate to write this feminist retelling of 1984 from the perspective of Julia. Newman is faithful to the original, but also expands the original narrative in amazing, thoughtful, and satisfying ways. Expect more homage than pastiche.

The writing is bright, crisp, and engaging. Where Orwell's 1984 appears black and white in its purposefully bleak depiction of state-enforced drudgery, Newman's 1984 seems to be in full color. The author presents forced conformity in vibrant, alive, human terms, and introduces elements of rebellion and resistance early on. This is the 1984 I would have enjoyed having as a companion piece when we read Orwell in high school.

There are many subtleties the reader may glean from the narrative. The description of the "plot machinery" for books is immediately reminiscent of Chatbot GPT, a thread connecting the original story to today's concerns about AI. We can actually well imagine the idea of a machine that writes books.

The focus, of course, is about how the story changes when we flip the view from Winston to Julia, and what can we learn from seeing the same story from a different center? How might we have underestimated Julia? This version of Julia is capable and daring. She fiercely protects her individuality from homogenization, and she knows how to game the system. One gets the impression that there is no problem that she cannot solve, no dare she would back down from. She is Hell on Wheels in an environment which believes both that Hell has been eradicated, and that all fire and ambition have been excised from society.

Julia sees the absurdity of the roles the people play: working hard to affect blank faces, as if pretending to be robots, while relying on robots to randomize their work, and displaying fake effusive enthusiasm for the state.

Again, drawing subtle parallels to modern day, the author implies comparison of Inner Party members to the Billionaire Class, those who try to convince us that they've reached positions of power due to their ingenuity and skills, rather than their inherited wealth and access to nepotism. In contrast, Julia does have actual skills, and she knows how to use them to her advantage, how proximity to power can be leveraged.

As crafty, intelligent, and savvy as Julia is, she is as vulnerable to fear as anyone else under such constant surveillance and forced enthusiasm compliance. Early in the novel, the author relates an episode, which quickly rockets from mild concern to heart-hammering frightening consequences. It's clear that no amount of bravado can prepare one to witness the brutality of jack-booted thugs invested with authority.

Julia experienced a devastatingly painful betrayal very early in her life, so no level of tough exterior can insulate her from the fear that it might happen again. It's as if her subconscious is engaged in prescient foreshadowing. This is another example of how Newman's version of 1984 both expands on the core principles of the original, and widens the view. Not only do we get the benefit of valuable backstory, but also we see many more groups of people represented: people of color, various ages of people, gay people. These folks seem to have been missing in Oceania before. We even see a little of the stories of the wounded veterans of the useless wars being waged continuously.

The author demonstrates that the powerful always pit one group against another as a form of deflection. The hypocrisy of political boogeyman-making is added to the hypocrisy of oligarchy packaging itself as egalitarianism. Capitalists and communists, the privileged and the poor, the East and the West, all demonize each other to their own detriment, never thinking to join forces against the real troublemakers of the world.

The beauty of Newman's version of 1984 is that the author includes a shocking number of people flouting the cult-like rules, and loads of clandestine activities of all kinds. Humanity resists both oppression and repression. The greatest displays of passion are those which require a bit of risk. In this story, Julia further reflects this boldness in one other important way: she engages in emancipated sex. We are accustomed to seeing female characters who incorporate sex in pursuit of a relationship, in search of love, or even as a tool of revenge or jealousy. Julia has no need of such pretenses or moral justifications. She has sex for the simplest reason of all: because she wants to. Society has names for a woman like that, and most are pejorative. If a man wants to engage in serial affairs, unencumbered by obligation or responsibility, he is called a "Ladies' Man," a "Playa," or at worst, maybe a Lothario. He is not called a slut, a whore, or a nymphomaniac. (Only recently has society come up with "man whore" which is also unsatisfying. It's like saying female serial killer.)

Julia is in control of her liasons, deciding on whom, when, and where, and she is unburdened by guilt or shame. She seizes real agency in an otherwise stifling environment. Her only concerns are about not getting caught, and about whether the sex will be good enough to justify the risk. It's almost a cost/benefit analysis, the way she's separated sex from emotional attachment. Winston, on the other hand, has more complicated motivations. He initially associates Julia with the State, and conflates his desire for her with his desire to screw the system. It's a little disturbing, the rage he funnels into his trysts with Julia. It sets up a harbinger of dangerous collision.

The narrative continues to zip along with ever-increasing indulgent highs, and equally increasing and unsettling lows, like a roller coaster that picks up speed in the turns. Then suddenly, with a jolt, we find ourselves firmly and uncomfortably in Julia's shoes. She has made impossible choices before, and now it seems she will have to do so again, partially because one impossible choice always opens up a door for another. It is this predicament which shatters our illusions about truth, goodness, and sacrifice.

Julia undergoes a hands-on education in the supremacy and surprising complexity of hate. It is the main driver of everything that happens, if you think about it. A cursory look around will confirm it. Love, compassion, empathy, sympathy, those are all well behind the leader in the race to rebuild society. And it is always being rebuilt. In this context, Peace isn't real. You must always be at war, one way or another. It solidifies the us vs. them, creates opportunities to shape public opinion, and focuses discontent on a group other than the powerful. First there was Sun Tzu's The Art of War; now we have The Art of Hate. It was always there. We just didn't recognize our own invisible institutional manifesto.

Ironically, with his misanthropy and misogyny, Winston probably could have learned to deeply hate, too. But, he is too far removed from actual discomfort to align with revolutionaries. He is all bluster, more interested in complaining than taking any action to change anything. He's the annoying political centrist, and quite unfeeling about the plight of others. Due to his casual acts of cruelty, it becomes easier for Julia to hate Winston. But, it does not get easier to play her role. Julia can feel how slipping into hate is a kind of erasure, a gradual loss of self. As Julia experiences the increasingly deleterious effects of hate saturation, the city prepares for Hate Week. (Lest we feel superior to this concept, ask yourself if you've ever seen a Hate Parade. You have, even if you didn't call it that.)

The author takes us inside the atmosphere of a people hyped up and manipulated into being violently angry at their perceived enemies. The power of gathering together to protest, or even riot, is an intoxicating heady atmosphere, one that Julia revels in. At this point, Julia still has not fully committed to the idea of hate; it intrigues her more than it entices her. She observes what one might call punishment addicts, people who can't get enough of hate and don't think that bad actors are getting enough of what's coming to them. These anger obsessives have lost their sense of self-awareness and are incapable of recognizing instances of projection or deflection. This may well be the author's social commentary on current cult-like followings. Hidden within that message is another warning: against Eugenics, which is always a feature of autocratic regimes. Newman's illustration of this authoritarian government is realistic: so repressive that it disappears dissenters, and tries to control every aspect of citizen life, down to their very thoughts.

As we approach the climactic tensile point we already know is coming, the writing becomes both more taut and somehow richer in depth. The philosophical questions become more boiled down and more desperate. Whom do you trust when there are cruel liars on all sides? The answer is obvious: no one. The system is unreliable, and therefore, untenable. Unfortunately, this does not preclude suffering. If the torture scenes in Room 101 traumatized you the first time, they will do so again in this one. It's an amazing symmetry to witness the torture of both Winston and Julia, to see that famous critical moment played out in detail.

The wild card would be the ending. If you could wrap up the story any way you wanted, what would you choose? I won't give anything away, except to say that Julia is resilient, smart, and brave, and that the ending is satisfying in ways you had not expected. This is the kind of book you re-read to see what you might have missed.

Thank you to NetGalley and to Mariner Books, an imprint of Harper Collins, for providing an early copy of this novel for review.












Profile Image for Hannah.
2,061 reviews314 followers
February 19, 2025
I didn’t love this book. I could see why it was important to write and to read, but I had I hard time investing in Julia’s character. She definitely fills a gap from the original 1984, but I didn’t enjoy Orwell's book either, particularly her character. However, I think there could be a lot of value in teaching both books together.
19 reviews
October 29, 2023
An unnecessary book

This novel is supposed to give a female perspective on the dystopian reality of 1984 as seen by Julia, the lover of Winston Smith. In the first part of the novel, it does so. But it falls far short of 1984. There are no discussions of ideas as in the original. Most importantly, the Party is shown to be weak; the horror of 1984 was that there were no real opponents of the party and no chance of it losing power. Julia will sell copies to people who were impressed by the original. It is only an imitation and not a good one.
Profile Image for лічі.
169 reviews125 followers
May 19, 2024
коли побачите десь зазначення, що ця книга � феміністичне переосмислення 1984 орвелла, не ведіться. це не воно, це радше фанфікш і переказ відомої нам історії з іншої сторони. і не скажу що дуже вдалий переказ, хоча є і кілька плюсів.

про що взагалі книга? про тоталітарний похмурий світ і політику великого брата з точки зору жінки, яка фігурує і "1984" як партнер-ін-крайм головного героя.
з того, що мені сподобалось:
� читалось доволі легко в порівнянні з оригінальним твором орвелла
� розділи про дитинство джулії в наз були ну дуже цікавими, бо якраз таки розкривали щось нове, невідоме
� атмосфера стрьомного тоталітарного світу збереглась і читати було моментами тривожно.

з того що мені не сподобалось:
� головна героїня яка просто марить чоловіками і сексом
� показова безкарність джулії за доволі се��йозні злочини
� абсурдність того що деколи відбувалось в книзі
і мені досі не зрозуміло навіщо написано цю книгу?

вона може сподобатись поціновувачам антиутопій, в англомовному букпросторі від неї прям фанатіють, книга точно має свого читача, але цей читач не я. мені не те що б не сподобалось, просто є відчуття втраченого часу, бо нічого нового чи цікавого з книги не винесла. але це тільки мої думки
Profile Image for Heather Moll.
Author12 books155 followers
September 15, 2023
A companion novel to 1984, this attempts to flesh out the Julia of the original. It throws you into the world, so if you haven’t read 1984 (and if you haven’t I don’t know why you’d pick this up) you’ll be lost.

This isn’t the pithy prose of Orwell, and yet there was still a lot telling instead of showing as we see Julia navigate this authoritarian landscape.

This is billed as a feminist retelling but Julia is just exploited over and over while she cares about absolutely nothing, and even when she has growth we see in the end that it doesn’t even matter.

I struggled to understand Julia’s motivations. She’s apathetic for nearly the entire book and I could never tell if that’s a comment on this oppressive regime or just poor character development. Even when she hates Big Brother it was hard to see how she got there, and her final deliverance isn’t really a deliverance at all so I’m not sure what the point is. You can just read 1984.

This also needs trigger warnings for CSA.

I received an arc from NetGalley
Profile Image for Kristy.
1,294 reviews169 followers
April 28, 2024
3.5 Stars

I loved seeing the events of through Julia’s POV. It was so much more developed and nuanced in my opinion. Julia was definitely more fleshed out.

This was a 4-star read for me until near the end. I felt it should have stopped at the end of chapter 21 as the last 50 pages dragged for me and felt unnecessary.
Profile Image for Ensaio Sobre o Desassossego.
381 reviews197 followers
January 28, 2024
"1984" foi e é um dos livros que mais me marcou, de tal forma que nos meus 26 anos de vida já o li 3 vezes (+1 adaptação gráfica). Ora, confesso que parti para esta leitura com algum receio. Afinal, para se mexer num livro da importância do escrito por George Orwell, era preciso saber-se o que se estava a fazer.

Primeiro de tudo, gabo a coragem à autora por ter pegado num clássico da importância do "1984" e ter contado a mesma história de outro ponto de vista. Penso que é preciso uma boa dose de coragem, mas também de insanidade para alguém se atrever a pegar numa história tão emblemática como esta e dizer "e se eu contasse isto de outra perspectiva?".
Além disso, acho esta ideia genial e o conceito de contar tudo o que acontece no "1984" pelos olhos de Julia é muito interessante.

Gostei muito das ideias que a autora apresenta neste livro, gostei da forma como coloca o leitor a pensar em coisas que não pensámos quando lemos o "1984", mas que estão lá. Mas como a história é contada do ponto de vista de um homem, não são referidas. Não são importantes para a personagem principal - que é um homem -, por isso, não são importantes para a história.

Assim como em "1984", não há esperança neste livro. No "1984" senti mais sufoco e angústia do que neste, mas também sei que seria muito difícil chegar aos níveis de genialidade de Orwell. Penso que isto advém do facto de o Winston prezar muito mais a liberdade, enquanto Julia apenas tenta sobreviver naquele mundo, é apolítica. Por isso, o livro escrito por Orwell é muito mais político.

O livro tem ainda alguma linguagem brejeira que não me lembro de ler no "1984" nem acho que fosse necessária para contar esta história e essa foi das partes que mais me incomodou.

Não esperem um novo "1984", até porque penso que não é esse o propósito do livro. Leiam-no como uma nova perspectiva, o olhar de uma mulher escrito por uma mulher sobre um dos livros mais importantes da história da literatura. "Julia" não veio para substituir "1984", mas sim para o complementar. E é sempre bom ler uma história conhecida com uma perspectiva diferente.
Profile Image for To-The-Point Reviews.
96 reviews72 followers
February 15, 2025
Finally, a feminist interpretation of a great man's work which is shitter, less meaningful, more tedious and more likely to appeal to retarded 12-year-old girls who actually (with a straight face) think they're oppressed. Finally!!

Slay queen!! Smash the patriarchy!! You go, girl!!
Profile Image for Anna.
1,998 reviews944 followers
February 19, 2024
Before I get into this review, a top tip for reading a book quickly: buy a copy to send to a friend for their birthday exactly a week before said birthday. Now you have a strict deadline for finishing it. This was my experience of , although it's unlikely that without the time limit I would have lingered as it isn't exactly a fun read. I suspect the reader's experience will be significantly related to their memories of reading . I do wonder what someone who hasn't read would make of it, and indeed what would encourage them to do so in the first place. fills in the female perspective on life under Big Brother and the events of missing from Winston's narration. It is essentially fanfiction, which I do not mean to be pejorative in any way as I have a keen appreciation for the form. (Another fanfic of note is chapter 7 of Adam Roberts' novel .)

My own experience of is of remembering the ending differently each time I read it, the first time in my teens. There's no other novel I can recall interpreting so divergently upon rereading it, to the point of wondering if I accidentally missed the last chapter first time around. Thus I think of as having a distinctive setting, a memorable political message, and an unstable ending. Newman fills gaps in both world-building and plot by making Julia the protagonist. Cynicism about sex and romance are the most striking elements she adds, in my view. There are many horrible and frightening scenes, as you'd expect, as well as the occasional joyful or kind moment. Pervasive throughout is pragmatism - Julia is just trying to survive and is skilled at doing so. While was a narrative of Winston's will and mind being broken by the imperative of survival under totalitarianism, doesn't have a clear arc of that kind. This left me contemplating the retelling's purpose.

Orwell wrote a dystopia set 36 years in the future; Newman wrote a dystopian alternate history set 40 years in the past. In my opinion, a dystopia should comment on anxieties of the time, as does. What is adding that is relevant to today's political context? Or if is more of a literary comment on history than a dystopia, what does it say about totalitarian communist regimes? I could not come up with much in answer to either question when thinking about the ending.



While I found it compelling enough while reading, at the end I was left without an impression of much depth. The blurb describes as provocative, but it seemed to me a shallow sort of provocation rather than genuine critique. Bringing the female perspective to the forefront is certainly an interesting project, but to be a ground-breaking feminist retelling I think it would need greater engagement with ideology and politics. Or perhaps the setting of doesn't offer space for a feminist political statement relevant to our times?

A relevant comparison is with recent retellings of . I enjoyed , which was largely narrated by the slave girl Briseis but otherwise left unchanged, while I was blown away by , which transposed the plot and characters of the Iliad to the Troubles of Northern Island. I can only conclude that is not ambitious or transformative enough. In order to make genuinely relevant to the present day, I think more would need to be changed than just the narrator. is a classic for its historical relevance and influence on later writing. Among recent female-centric dystopian novels, I found Naomi Alderman's a much more rewarding read.
Profile Image for Chris.
572 reviews171 followers
November 14, 2023
I mostly enjoyed reading this, and found it interesting to view the dystopian world of 1984 through Julia's eyes. I had hoped it would be a more feminist retelling though, so am a bit disappointed as well.
Thank you Granta and Netgalley UK for the ARC
Profile Image for alex.
475 reviews49 followers
Shelved as 'did-not-finish'
July 20, 2024
DNF @ 32%

I'm throwing in the towel on this one. Obviously, I only got a third of the way through, but many of the issues Giulia identified in her (excellent) review were already evident to me at that point, and after the clearing scene, any remaining hope I had that Sandra Newman could successfully grapple with the sexism or rape apologia of the original was extinguished.

On that scene: Newman would have us believe that Julia's internal response to Winston's confession that he "wanted to rape [her]" is: "This was a far greater success than she could have anticipated." Yes, you read that right. The entire scene is re-framed to portray Winston's tendency towards violence as not a tendency at all, but a rational, reasonable response, at least in this single circumstance, to Julia's goading. His aggression, his open threats, his violent fantasies, that's all okay, because Julia finds masculinity (which I guess we're admitting = sexual violence?) suchhhh a turn on, and not only that, she was the mastermind behind it all. It was calculated. This is the response she wanted, actually!

Give me a fucking break. I don't know about you, but if the person I was interested in told me he wanted to rape me, that would not be my reaction, no matter how horny I was for tradmasc dudebros. If Winston were Julia's only option for copulation under a repressive regime, maybe I could believe it would be hers, but Newman goes to such lengths to ensure we know how much Julia loves to fuck, how little problem she has defying Big Brother so she can go about her extracurricular criminal fucking, that she's effectively drained this scene of any credibility or meaning whatsoever. In the original, it's revolting, but at least it's evocative. At least it meant... something. Here, it's impotent. Sterile. Flaccid.

Speaking more broadly: Newman's approach to the aforementioned sexism is to pepper these moments of silent defiance throughout. These are the parameters she must adhere to, after all - '1984 from Julia's perspective' is not quite the reimagining we were billed, as Newman is beholden to hit all the same plot beats in order for her version to fit within the canon, whose endorsement she somehow received. The problem is that in doing so, she renders Julia as a character utterly unbelievable - this is supposed to be a feminist retelling, and our female protagonist is too busy frothing at the mouth for "long hard thighs", "tight arse[s], "spent prick[s]" and "hairy thighs" (yes, again, and yes, that's all in the one passage) to ever so much as question, let alone condemn, male violence - Winston simpering and stupid, and the Big Brother regime laughably incompetent.

And this is what I mean about sterility. In 1984, we felt the stakes of Winston's actions, whether or not we knew those stakes to be true. It didn't actually matter how all-powerful Big Brother was; what mattered was the possibility of that power, and the impossibility of ever really comprehending the vast authority that lies behind the machinations of a surveillance state. But here, Newman comes right out and tells us: Winston's defiance was inconsequential all along. Where he believes he's done something radical by conversing with a prole man, "Julia dropped back and stooped to fiddle at her bootlaces so he wouldn't see her laughing. Poor Winston! He'd talked to a single prole, and felt he knew all there was to know about them! She didn't have the heart to tell him how many proles she'd dealt with over the years." Nothing he does is of any significance anymore, because Julia did it first. And his misogyny doesn't matter, because she's cool with it, actually. She's a cool chick who loves to fuck.

So, if you're undermining the anti-totalitarian messaging of the original by neutering the fictional totalitarian state in question, and perpetuating the same harmful gender dynamics Orwell lived out in his personal life, and wasn't a clever enough writer to imagine a world free from in his art, what's the point in retelling 1984 at all? I can't see one, and I don't see myself slogging through the remaining two thirds to find out.
Profile Image for Melanie Caldicott.
340 reviews34 followers
June 4, 2024
Dnf'd halfway through. There are many critical reviews of this which comment much better than I can. But I could not bear the boring prose, depressing discussions and gratuitous language and sex descriptions any longer. I just didn't think this was an intelligent companion to 1984 and if this is the best we can do with a modern retelling then I think we do the context and originality of Orwell's classic a disservice.
Profile Image for Lauren .
1,826 reviews2,531 followers
October 26, 2024
Orwell's seminal dystopian 1984 gets a recontextualization in Sandra Newman's JULIA, this time told through the perspective of Julia, Winston's lover from the original text.

The story begins right before Julia and Winston encounter and start to pursue each other at their respective jobs at the Ministry of Truth, Big Brother's censorship/revisionist wing of the government. Through flashbacks in the text, we learn of her childhood and youth, the childhood grooming and abuse by Party members on young women, and the measures they take to hide their crimes, at the cost to many women's lives. Julia grows to be a confident and well-assured woman, seeing the Party for what it is, but also knowing no other alternative. It's a spectrum of "street smarts" and naivete that comes with each interpersonal relationship (we meet many other young women that Julia lives with in a hostelry, friends/romantic partners, etc), and she has learned to use her body and sexual acts as a way to move throughout this totalitarian dark world.

The second part of the book largely corresponds with 1984, many lines and sentences of dialogue taken from the original. However, we as readers now know that Julia is working with the Thought Police as a sex worker, and that Winston is but one of her many lovers. Some of the 1984 sub-stories are even seen in a new light and get more "shades of gray" in Newman's story. This was a subversive plot addition in the retelling, and initially it didn't work well for this reader, but I saw how it shaped the later events that readers will remember from 1984.

The arrest and imprisonment/torture scenes in JULIA are much more detailed than in 1984, and for me, went on way too long. The middle of the book was a challenging slog (there is a lot of torture), with the one exception of Julia meeting a woman Party member in prison and her brief yet momentous conversation that gives more than a glimpse at the inter-workings of the Party.



Overall, a thought-provoking book that builds out Orwell's Oceania society much more than the original. This was a lively book club read with a lot of discussion, especially as many of us had read/re-read 1984 within the last few months. My own misgivings about the book were the torture and the sex - I felt both were overdone in this book - and the pacing of the middle of the book.

3.5 / 5 - rounded up to 4 for ingenuity
Profile Image for Laura.
937 reviews128 followers
March 27, 2024
So, what do you hate? I hate contemporary dystopian fiction. YA dystopia is on the ebb, but its adult counterpart is still on the rise, producing so many faux-feminist novels that basically go like this:

I unfortunately live in a dystopia where women are all forced to go to school in dustbins/date 4.5 men per day/only communicate via Morse Code. This all seemed totally reasonable to me until the day I was activated as a fictional protagonist and I realised it was Wrong. However, nobody else except me has the intelligence to resist the system! I courageously flee my life, often while protecting my children, and find liberation with the resistance, where things are so much better because they're basically the same as they are today. This is a lesson for us all about the dangers of totalitarian, patriarchal regimes. Sometimes we also get to learn about climate change because there is flooding.

While I'm talking about things I hate, another terrible faux-feminist fictional trope is the 'classic story from a female perspective', which is particularly common in Greek mythology retellings, but sometimes pops up elsewhere. This often seems to be an excuse to expose how 'sexist' either the original text or its male protagonists were, usually with little understanding of either the subtleties of the original text or the context within which it was written. More importantly, though, this is pointless fiction: what is it telling us other than what we already know?

Therefore, Sandra Newman'sJuliarang alarm bells for me. Orwell's 1984from Julia's perspective? Hmmmm. Bring the hate-read on! And yet, Newman illuminates exactly why most recent dystopias don't work by engaging so brilliantly with this older one.

Julia, is, wisely, not trying to be1984-from-a-woman's-perspective. It is also not the same kind of book, at all, as1984.I'm not a1984expert but my sense of the novel has always been that it is less a realistic dystopia and more a creation of a certain kind of suffocating thought-world. We're tied so tightly to Winston Smith's perspective because Orwell wants us to really feel, by the end of the novel, that there is no way out. Some reviewers have criticisedJuliafor, in contrast, 'offering a way out', but I think this is a massive misreading. In1984,Julia clearly relates to the Party in a very different way to Winston. Orwell tells us: 'Life as she saw it was quite simple. You wanted a good time: "they", meaning the Party, wanted to stop you having it; you broke the rules as best you could.' They are different people not just because they are different sexes, but, and perhaps more importantly, because Julia is younger, more practical, far less interested in theory, and basically just wants to get on with her life. Newman could have ducked out of this, but instead she runs with it. In a very early scene in Julia, Julia finds out that one of the girls she shares a hostel with has committed a 'sexcrime',giving birth to a dead baby in a toilet. This is where our typical dystopian protagonist would rebel. Julia? 'Once Julia had made the report, the patrol appeared with horrible swiftness... Through the fright, there was the steadying feeling of knowing one's part and performing it well'.She knows how you deal with something like this and keep yourself safe, and that's her main concern.

Newman, however, recognises that Julia's attitude is as much a threat to the Party as Winston's, although their different personalities lead them towards different fates. Julia's mindset means that her emotional responses, unlike Winston's, are automatically dulled. Newman beautifully evokes what it must be like to live like that, not feeling much of anything at all, and how hate finally comes to Julia like blood rushing back into a limb. The ending of the novel, where has been read by some reviewers as optimistic, because This doesn't make sense to me for two reasons.

If 1984is about love - what we mean when we say we love somebody, and how that love can be destroyed - Juliais about hate. Hate is love because both involve a deep connection to another human being, like the man from the Thought Police who 'had learned to hate so completely that all his moods were hatred... He hated all who came through his door, with an attentiveness that foresaw all their needs. He hated more unselfishly and devotedly than most can love'. When we can't feel either any more, that's when we know we're in trouble. It's hard to argue that Julia completely stands on its own two feet - it's so deeply steeped in the lore of1984- but as a fanfic, beautifully integrated into the gaps and inconsistencies of the original canon, it's terrific.4.5 stars.
61 reviews1 follower
January 27, 2024
I can’t imagine what it must be like to be paid to take a shit over the characters and legacy of a book as classic as 1984, but Newman does just that.

Despite the point of this novel being to give Julia more agency, she has about as much character as in 1984 (not much,) which makes this an absolute slog to read. She is passive in every aspect of her life, and goes along with whatever ridiculously contrived thing is happening to her at the moment. I realize one of the themes is that Julia has “no choices� in life, but this is a mockery of her character in 1984 who was a rebellious young woman entranced within the Party.

Mockery this book is - I lost count of the number of snide comments “recontextualizing� events from 1984 to make fun of Winston, Charrington, O’Brien, etc. It seems to be Newman’s goal to point out any perceived flaw from 1984, real or otherwise, and flout how superior she is. The party’s maxims are thrown away and replaced by a severely underwhelming “Everything is hate,� Winston is portrayed as a bumbling unaware idiot who cannot even notice Julia is 6 months pregnant, O’Brien is a melodramatic hack who steals catchphrases from other Inner Party members, it is a circus of trying to make you hate the original characters.

Not only are the characters assassinated, Oceania itself is. Gone is the totalitarian surveillance state where even talking in your sleep would have you doomed - in Julia, almost everybody we meet either lies daily, commits sexcrime often, deals with the prole black market, or bribes party officials to skirt the rules. It is even revealed the Inner Party don’t really believe in anything, and the entirety of the imprisonment of Symes, Ampleforth, Parsons, Julia, Winston, is all some stupid squabble about funding between Records and Fiction.

The last part of the book is the most ridiculous of all, transforming Oceania from one of the three global superpowers to some ineffectually run North Korea-esque country instead which is easily overtaken by some foreigners who have perfect education and regular “democratic� governments.

There is no gripping central message, nothing that leaves you thinking about the world around us, just a long series of events that I wish I had never read.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
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