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![]() ![]() ![]() To learn more about how and for what purposes Amazon uses personal information (such as Amazon Store order history), please visit our Privacy Notice. You can change your choices at any time by visiting Cookie Preferences, as described in the Cookie Notice. Click ‘Customise Cookies’ to decline these cookies, make more detailed choices, or learn more. Third parties use cookies for their purposes of displaying and measuring personalised ads, generating audience insights, and developing and improving products. This includes using first- and third-party cookies, which store or access standard device information such as a unique identifier. If you agree, we’ll also use cookies to complement your shopping experience across the Amazon stores as described in our Cookie Notice. ![]() We also use these cookies to understand how customers use our services (for example, by measuring site visits) so we can make improvements. We use cookies and similar tools that are necessary to enable you to make purchases, to enhance your shopping experiences and to provide our services, as detailed in our Cookie Notice. ![]() ![]() The film, by the studio of the British animation husband-wife team of John Halas and Joy Batchelor, features beautiful scenes but also grim ones. That does not invalidate the movie, because it sticks close to Orwell’s narrative. The CIA, it is now evident, financed the 1954 film. That turned into outright persecution when the Soviet-backed Reds accused the POUM of being “fascist.” He and his wife Eileen, who had joined him, escaped back to England, and the Reds convicted him in absentia of “Trotskyism.” His Animal Farm reflected much of what all this had taught him. The Englishman Orwell – Eric Arthur Blair, 1903-1950 – considered himself a “democratic socialist.” Traveling to Spain to fight for the Left in the Civil War there, in 1937 he joined the Workers’ Party of Marxist Unification (POUM), only to run into the factional disputes that plagued the leftist side. ![]() ![]() The movies do so, of course, via Orwell’s device of a story of farm animals who revolt against their human masters. Neither film is for children these are stark tales that, like the novel, well depict the brutality, terror, lies, violations of conscience, and disregard for life that murderous Communist Party regimes always inflict upon their enslaved subjects. ![]() The two movie retellings of George Orwell’s 1945 novel Animal Farm – the animated version from 1954 and the live-action-and-animatronics one from 1999 – each follow the author’s allegory about Soviet Communism, the 1999 film a little more so. ![]() ![]() ![]() White Fang is adopted as a cub by a band of Indians, but when their dogs reject him he grows up violent, defensive, and dangerous. White Fang charts the reverse journey, as a fierce wolf-dog hybrid born in the wild is eventually tamed. There he suffers from the brutal extremes of nature and equally brutal treatment by a series of masters, until he learns to heed his long-buried instincts and turn his back on civilization. The canine hero of The Call of the Wild is Buck, a pampered pet in California who is stolen and forced to be a sled dog in the Alaskan wilderness. Both novels grippingly dramatize the harshness of the natural world and what lies beneath the thin veneer of human civilization. Jack London’s two most beloved tales of survival in Alaska were inspired by his experiences in the Yukon during the Klondike Gold Rush. ![]() ![]() ![]() I was too blinded by what I dumbly called “love” to see how far apart we were in spite of being together. ![]() She was my first kiss, first time, first real girlfriend, and I treated her as if she were destined to be my last. ![]() Really, it reminded me of one more than the other, hence the parenthesis. Having the blurbs on the back be authors talking about their own breakups, instead of the book, was a nice touch, and the book got me thinking about my own breakup(s) as well. Min’s love for and committment to Ed may slip into confusing territory occasionally, causing me to wonder if she is, or at least was, really that stupid, but that also is true to life, I guess. Were you to make a series of minor adjustments, the book could read equally well as a love letter… of sorts. ![]() Lending it that noticeable heft are Maira Kalman’s illustrations of the many mementos Min leaves for her ex, Ed, to go along with this, her letter to him explaining, as you would expect, her reasons for breaking up.Īlbeit comparatively lacking in reasons for their getting, and staying, together, Why We Broke Up feels like an accurate summation of the conflicting emotions drudged up by both love and heartbreak. To avoid having to carry a book so heavy on the walk to and from work, which is when I do a large portion of my reading, I read this all in one (briefly interrupted) sitting. ![]() |