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20001-1567921337David R Godine Pub 2000. Paperback. New. reprint edition. 600 pages. 8.50x5.50x1.75 inches. David R Godine Pub paperback
35152623like new. unknown
9786587885346-11-07889Citadel Grupo Editorial. New. Citadel Grupo Editorial unknown
9786587885346TEMPORALIS. new. DOIS CL�SSICOS DA LITERATURA MUNDIAL REUNIDOS EM UM NICO VOLUME! Lidos e discutidos em muitas escolas e universidades nas ltimas geraes como exemplos de peso moral e prescincia pol�tica muito al�m das leituras obrigat�rias ainda so explorados por prazer emoo e instruo mesmo por jovens que no tenham sido compelidos a isso. Hoje com a ampla e segura reputao alcanada pelo autor pode ser chocante lembrar que ambas as suas obras-primas quase foram abortadas ao nascer seja por publicaes negadas ou pela destruio da guerra. J� em um passado menos distante esses livros costumavam ser proibidos em pa�ses sob o regime comunista e ainda so ocasionalmente suprimidos em naes de partido nico. Orwell provavelmente no imaginava em vida alcanar tamanha projeo. J� a censura cont�nua o teria surpreendido muito menos. A revoluo dos bichos foi escrita durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial numa �poca em que Londres estava sendo bombardeada pelos nazistas. Orwell desprezava Hitler e o fascismo e tinha lutado como soldado volunt�rio pela Repblica Espanhola mas ele escolheu este momento pouco prop�cio para escrever uma s�tira mortal sobre a iluso do Comunismo Sovi�tico. Em 1984 o autor fez uso extenso de seu pr�prio conhecimento de crueldade. Em sua vida ele testemunhou o comportamento autorit�rio entre meninos em internatos ingleses TEMPORALIS unknown
7908312104955PRINCIPIS. new. George Orwell � um dos escritores mais importantes do s�culo XX. Foi autor de romances ensaios cr�ticas e artigos jornal�sticos com textos de f�cil compreenso inteligentes e cr�ticos apontando as injustias sociais. Suas obras trazem oposio ao totalitarismo o que as tornaram influentes na cultura popular mas tamb�m na pol�tica. Conhea a essncia de Orwell com o romance dist�pico 1984 e o romance sat�rico A revoluo dos bichos. PRINCIPIS unknown
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G2491704781I3N00Sahara Publisher Books 1949. Hardcover. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Sahara Publisher Books hardcover
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198456654Bloomington IN: The Friends of Lilly Library/ the Private Press of Fredric Brewer. Near Fine in Fine dust jacket. 1984. First Edition. Hardcover. Original black cloth titled in red. #31 or 200 copies. About fine; very slight bump to spine head. The DJ has faintly toned spine with bit of softening to spine head. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 451 pages . The Friends of Lilly Library/ the Private Press of Fredric Brewer hardcover
2025SKU1731744Berkley 2025-08-19. paperback. New. 5x1x8. New Book Ships with Tracking Berkley paperback
2025SKU1735947Berkley 2025-08-19. paperback. New. 5x1x8. New Textbook Ships with Tracking Berkley paperback
FORT951832Penguin Books. Used - Good. Includes Nineteen Eighty-Four Down and Out in Paris and London Road to Wigan Pier Animal Farm Keep the Apidistra Flying & Homage to Catalonia Penguin Books unknown
1946SKU1045524Harcourt Brace and Company 1946. First American Edition. hardcover. Very Good. 0x0x0. Harcourt Brace and Company; New York 1946. Hardcover. First US Edition. A Very Good black cloth binding with gilt lettering on spine binding sturdy and intact some handling/scuffing to boards small white spot mid front board some crimping to spine edges bit of age toning to pages rubbing along board edges Dust wrapper missing. A nice overall clean and unmarked copy. 8vooctavo or approx. 6 x 9 inches. 118pp. We pack securely and ship daily with delivery confirmation on every book. Please Note: Depending on site actual book for sale may differ physically from picture listed. Additional scans are available for any item please inquire. Harcourt, Brace and Company hardcover
238226022X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2013Q-0871404621Liveright 2013-08-12. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Liveright hardcover
2012Q-0871404109Liveright 2012-08-20. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Liveright hardcover
1913003019.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
SONG2491704781Sahara Publisher Books 1949-06-08. hardcover. Used: Good. 6.00x0.75x9.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Sahara Publisher Books hardcover
1913003043.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1946133445January 9 1946. Rare typed letter signed by the acclaimed author of Nineteen-Eighty Four George Orwell; part of a long correspondence with scientist Edward R. Ward regarding his views on science. One page typescript the letter reads: '9th January 1946 Dear Mr. Ward Your letter has been passed on to be by "Tribune". I am sorry that in their correspondence columns I should have answered what was really an abridgement of your original letter; but I had not seen the latter and I did not know that what was printed was a shortened version. I cannot enter into what might become a prolonged controversy but I must stick to two of my original points: a that many scientists including some of those you name appear to adopt an extremely unscientific attitude towards problems in which their emotions and loyalties are involved; and b that members of the general public such as myself have a right to form and express their own opinions on the relationship between science and society. I do not know in what way your original letter was mutilated but you did state quite clearly that I as a journalist had no right to express an opinion on matters that were the sole concern of scientists. It was this remark in your letter that led me to reply. The theologians make exactly similar claims - for example that a member of the lay public has no right to air his opinions on such questions as the existence of God - and the one claim seems to me to be about as well founded as the other. Yours truly "Geo. Orwell" George Orwell.' With Orwell's 27B Canonbury Square Islington London return address. From the late 19th century to the turn of the 20th century English scientist Eduard R. Ward was a semi-professional microscopist and well-known figure in the Manchester scientific society. He was one of the founders of the Manchester Microscopical Society and remains best known for his photographic documentation of the construction of the Manchester Ship Canal. Science-Gossip 1901. First published in the Tribune on October 26 1945 Orwell's "What is Science" elaborated on the ideas summarized in his reply to Ward essentially warning of the danger of leaving scientific pursuits to scientists in laboratories and making it inaccessible to the general public. Ward responded to Orwell's "What is Science" in the Tribune in October 1945 but the Tribune printed only an abridged version of his letter. Orwell responded to him in print again in November but had done so without the full text of Ward's original letter. This January 9 1946 letter is his private response to the letter in full. In near fine condition. Double matted and framed with a photograph of Orwell. The entire piece measures 19 inches by 16.25 inches. In his concise article "What is Science" Orwell concludes "A hundred years ago Charles Kingsley described science as ‘making nasty smell in a laboratory’. A year or two ago a young industrial chemist informed me smugly that he ‘could not see what was the use of poetry’. So the pendulum swings to and fro but it does not seem to me that one attitude is any better than the other. At the moment science is on the upgrade and so we hear quite rightly the claim that the masses should be scientifically educated: we do not hear as we ought the counter-claim that the scientists themselves would benefit by a little education. Just before writing this I saw in an American magazine the statement that a number of British and American physicists refused from the start to do research on the atomic bomb well knowing what use would be made of it. Here you have a group of same men in the middle of a world of lunatics. And though no names were published I think it would be a safe guess that all of them were people with some kind of general cultural background some acquaintance with history or literature or the arts — in short people whose interests were not in the current sense of the word purely scientific." unknown
6586181097.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1913003035.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1913003000.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback