Emily (Books with Emily Fox on Youtube)'s Reviews > 1984
1984
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March 19, 2017
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March 19, 2017
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March 29, 2017
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rated it 3 stars
Mar 29, 2017 12:02PM

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Exactly what I found boring :S



I liked what happened after that but not the ending!





Exactly what I found boring :S"
I didn't appreciate the significance of the appendix either when I first read it but someone online (I wish I could remember where) highlighted for me the fact that it's actually part of the narrative itself. Because the essay isn't just written by Orwell; it's an essay by someone in the world of 1984 that explicitly refers to Ingsoc and Newspeak as past phenomena. And what this does then is invert the brutally pessimistic ending of the main narrative; because the dystopia of 1984 clearly collapses. In fact, rereading the essay, it states (Indirectly) at the end that Ingsoc is already "history" by the year 2010. So actually the ending is one of the book's most impressive parts; it's so subtle and easily overlooked in the wake of the main narrative's conclusion (Winston succumbing to a "love" for Big Brother is such an emphatic statement of despair) but once you appreciate its significance, the appendix becomes quite emotionally affecting. I'd highly recommend rereading it from this perspective; and if you like I'd be happy to send you a link to the appendix.

She was an agent for Ingsoc. She formed a relationship with Winston so the party could assess him. Also, Mr. Charrington's antique shop was run by the government for the express purpose of trapping dissidents; which is why Winston was surreptitiously manoeuvred into renting a room there for his trysts with Julia.



Just as a forewarning before saying too much about how loathsome it is in certain company. Some people are genuinely offended when others don’t like 1984. It’s definitely a weird reaction. Like, you’d think they wrote it themself and sacrificed their own grandma to do it.
