Books & Novels: 

                Down And Out In Paris And London (1933) - ... is his first book, and it deals of his 
                own poverty he has experienced after leaving Burma. 

                Burmese Days (1934) - ... is Orwell's first novel. A novel about living(and dying) in 
                the British colony of Burma. 

                Clergyman's Daughter (1935) -... is a novel articulating evident elements of social 
                crisis. 

                Keep The Aspidistra Flying (1936) 

                The Road to Wigan Pier (1937) - ... is a detailed and objective study of the live of 
                miners in the Lancashire town of Wigan. 

                Homage To Catalonia (1938) - ... recounts his experience fighting for the P.O.U.M. 
                (Marxists) in the Spanish Civil War. 

                Coming Up For Air (1939) 

                Animal Farm (1945) - ... is a fairy story with political background, based on the 
                Russian revolution. 

                Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949) - ... is a picture of a egalitarian and totalitarian future. 

                Essays: 

                Decline of the English Murder and other Essays - this Essay comments the 
                changing face of fiction crime 

                Inside a Whale and other Essays 

                The Lion and the Unicorn: Socialism and the English Genius 

                The collected essays, Journalism, and Letters (4 Vols.) 
                Vol 1.: An Age Like This (1920-1940) 
                Vol 2.: My Country Right Or Left (1940-1943) 
                Vol 3.: As I Please (1943-1945) 
                Vol 4.: In front Of Your Nose (1945-1950) 

                Notes on Dali (1944) form Dickens, Dali & Others: Studies in Popular Culture . 

                The Notes on Nationalism (1945) 

                The Prevention of Literature (1946) 

                Why I Write (1947) 

                Politics and the English Language (1946) - in this essay Orwell draws a link 
                between authoritarianism and linguistic decay. 

                'Why Socialists Don't believe in Fun' (1943) 

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