Tag Archives: George Orwell

Picks from a Book Sanctuary: Five Speculative Fiction Novels to Preserve

3 Jan

In September 2023, Hoboken became the first Book Sanctuary City in New Jersey. As a book sanctuary, the Library is a place where people can borrow and read challenged books, endangered books are accessible to everyone, and people can be educated about the history of book banning and burning. You can read the sanctuary resolution and learn more about Hoboken as a book sanctuary here.

The library hosts many book talks, story times, and other events including those about banned and challenged books. Several of the books we have read as part of the Library’s Science Fiction and Fantasy Group over the last ten years have been banned or challenged. It does not seem coincidental that many share a dystopian view of the future where ideas and thoughts are tightly controlled and freedom of speech is limited.

Feed 
by M.T. Anderson
This was the first book read in January of 2014 with the Hoboken Public Library’s Science Fiction and Fantasy book discussion group. A young adult title, it was still appreciated by our group members for its dystopian depiction of the future where the internet is delivered directly to your brain. Its satire of corporate and media culture feels even more relevant than when it was first published in 2002.

The Handmaid’s Tale
by Margaret Atwood
Margaret Atwood was my favorite author and poet in my 20’s. The group read this for Women’s History Month in March of 2019. This dystopian view pictures a world in which women are kept submissive to men and have lost all control and right to their own bodies. It has gotten increased attention recently with a streaming series adaptation.

His Dark Materials (series)
by Philip Pullman
This fantasy series begins on an alternate earth where human souls are visible as talking animal companions and air ships fill the sky. Creative and thought provoking, this Young Adult novel, is one of my favorites. We discussed the novel in February of 2016 and viewed the movie adaptation of The Golden Compass. It has now also been adapted as a TV series.

1984 
by George Orwell
This classic where Big Brother is always watching and rigid social standards and newspeak are instituted, turns family members against one another and forces its citizens to deny and disavow their own memories. We read this for the group in January of 2016.

Fahrenheit 451 
by Ray Bradbury
It seems inevitable this classic work to take on the topic of book banning and book burning would be the victim of bans itself. The group read this title in June 2018 and also viewed the 1966 movie adaptation.

You can stop by our display on the second floor near the Adult Computer Area and Reference desk, to see books that have been challenged or banned elsewhere in the country over the years. Other ways you can assist and take a stand against the banning of books are to host and join in-person or virtual banned book clubs and encourage critical discussion of censored stories; those with Black, Indigenous, People of Color (“BIPOC”) and LGBTQ+ stories are most often challenged. Also consider collecting and protecting endangered books and lending them to friends and neighbors including the use of local Little Free Libraries as book sanctuaries, adding endangered books as a way to support the freedom to read. On social media you can use the tag #TheBookSanctuary.

Here you can read a past post written in honor of banned book week with some more reading suggestions.

Come celebrate the 10th Anniversary of the Hoboken Public Library’s Science Fiction and Fantasy Book Club this year! On January 25 at 6 PM we will be discussing the exciting new dystopian fantasy The Book That Wouldn’t Burn by Mark Lawrence.

Posted by:
Aimee Harris
Information and Digital Services Manager

George Orwell’s Best Work: Homage to Catalonia

24 Apr

Every year, thousands of high school students across the U.S. read Animal Farm and 1984 by George Orwell. Orwell’s ideas about revolution, authoritarianism, and surveillance stand the test of time because they were accurate in predicting many of the absurdities of the modern world. I still have a soft spot for these two classics, but without question my favorite book by Orwell is Homage to Catalonia, his non-fiction account of his time fighting in the Spanish Civil War.

As a young man, Orwell left England to fight for the Spanish Republic against the army of the dictator Francisco Franco. He was not alone as a foreigner in Spain, as thousands of other idealistic young men from across Europe and North America went to participate in the fight against fascism and take part in the working class uprising in the streets of Barcelona where anarchists and militant trade unions had taken over the factories and restaurants in the hopes of creating a revolutionary society.

Homage to Catalonia can be broken down into four sections. The first is Orwell’s experiences on the Spanish front, spending months sleeping in the cold and filth of the trenches in some of the most miserable conditions imaginable. The second is the description of a street fight in Barcelona between Communist, Socialist, and Anarchist militias who were all fighting against Franco, but grew to distrust each other. The third is Orwell’s miraculous survival from a bullet he takes to the neck, and the fourth is the suppression of his political party by the Spanish government which forces him to return to England.

My favorite section of the book is by far the description of revolutionary Catalonia. Orwell writes about the temporary society the anarchists had created:

“Many of the normal motives of civilized life – snobbishness, money-grubbing, fear of the boss, etc. – had simply ceased to exist. The ordinary divisions of society had disappeared to an extent that is almost unthinkable in the money-tainted air of England; there was no one there except the peasants and ourselves, and no one owned anyone else as his master. Of course such a state of affairs could not last. It was simply a temporary and local phase in an enormous game that is being played over the whole surface of the earth. But it lasted long enough to have its effect upon anyone who experienced it.”

Homage to Catalonia is essentially a tragedy as it set against the backdrop of Franco’s takeover of Spain, but one cannot help feel the excitement and ultimate disillusionment that Orwell felt during this unique time in history. Orwell’s book is not just the definitive account of revolutionary Catalonia, it is one of the best war stories ever written.

You can check out 1984, Animal Farm, Homage to Catalonia and more of Orwell’s work on Hoopla as ebooks or digital audiobooks.  Animal Farm and 1984 are also available from elibrarNJ and eBCCLS.

What is your favorite work by Orwell?  Share it with us in our comment section!

Written by:
Karl Schwartz
Young Adult Librarian