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I Have Tried to Tell the Truth : 1943 - 1944 (Rev. and updated ed)

Orwell, GeorgeDavison, P. H.(Volume editor)
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Orwell served as Literary Editor of Tribune from 29 November 1943 until he went to Continental Europe as War Correspondent for The Observer and the Manchester Evening News in mid February 1945.

He continued to write for Tribune until 4 April 1947, when his eightieth 'As I Please' appeared.

This column is now, in this edition, printed without cuts.

In these thirteen months Orwell reviewed 86 books and he wrote essays on Twain, Smollett, Thackeray, and The Vicar of Wakefield.

It was a period in which several important essays appeared, but perhaps the most intriguing is one that has previously neither been accredited to him nor reprinted: 'Can Socialists Be Happy?', written under the pseudonym, John Freeman.

Four 'London Letters' were contributed to Partisan Review.

The English People, though not published until 1947, is included in this volume.

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Product Details
Martin Secker & Warburg Ltd
0436205521 / 9780436205521
Paperback
06/09/2001
United Kingdom
English
xxix, 534p.
24 cm
general /academic/professional/technical Learn More
Previous ed.: 1998.