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Keep the Aspidistra Flying por George Orwell
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Keep the Aspidistra Flying

por George Orwell

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Satirical, sad, funny.
  mulliner | Nov 29, 2009 |
Probably my least favourite Orwell novel, as I found the central character Gordon Comstock very irritating with his constant moans about having no money and his stubborn resistance to doing anything constructive about it; he really has chosen poverty due to his mental attitude. The novel improved after he got hopelessly drunk and spent the night in a police cell. The story became more engaging and the ending was heartwarming, if a little sudden and twee. ( )
  john257hopper | Apr 8, 2009 |
I read this a couple of years and enjoyed it quite a bit.
I saw the movie which was based on it which is good too.
Kind of humorous about a guy in a seedy neighborhood. ( )
  kcslade | Mar 14, 2009 |
This book grew on me. At first I hated it. Gordon is a rather unlikeable protagonist. He quit his well-paying job because he didn't want to be a capitalist slave, then he spent the rest of the book whining about how miserable he was being poor. But I gave the book another read, and decided I liked it. Sure, Gordon is whiny, but that's pretty realistic -- very few people bear their suffering in silence. His relationship with Rosemary and the way his poverty affected it was also well-done.

A bonus: if you compare the beginning of Aspidistra to 1984, you can see similarities -- both characters are looking out the window at a dismal scene, a poster is flapping. And there are also similarities to Gordon and Winston's incarcerations. Both sit in jail cells made of glittering white bricks. ( )
  meggyweg | Mar 7, 2009 |
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Keep the Aspidistra Flying

Descrição do livro

Amazon.com (ISBN 0156468999, Paperback)

London, 1936. Gordon Comstock has declared war on the money god; and Gordon is losing the war. Nearly 30 and "rather moth-eaten already," a poet whose one small book of verse has fallen "flatter than any pancake," Gordon has given up a "good" job and gone to work in a bookshop at half his former salary. Always broke, but too proud to accept charity, he rarely sees his few friends and cannot get the virginal Rosemary to bed because (or so he believes), "If you have no money ... women won't love you." On the windowsill of Gordon's shabby rooming-house room is a sickly but unkillable aspidistra--a plant he abhors as the banner of the sort of "mingy, lower-middle-class decency" he is fleeing in his downward flight. In Keep the Aspidistra Flying, George Orwell has created a darkly compassionate satire to which anyone who has ever been oppressed by the lack of brass, or by the need to make it, will all too easily relate. He etches the ugly insanity of what Gordon calls "the money-world" in unflinching detail, but the satire has a second edge, too, and Gordon himself is scarcely heroic. In the course of his misadventures, we become grindingly aware that his radical solution to the problem of the money-world is no solution at all--that in his desperate reaction against a monstrous system, he has become something of a monster himself. Orwell keeps both of his edges sharp to the very end--a "happy" ending that poses tough questions about just how happy it really is. That the book itself is not sour, but constantly fresh and frequently funny, is the result of Orwell's steady, unsentimental attention to the telling detail; his dry, quiet humor; his fascination with both the follies and the excellences of his characters; and his courageous refusal to embrace the comforts of any easy answer. --Daniel Hintzsche

(retirado da Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:04 -0400)

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